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White House Fact Sheet on transformation of US military, August
16, 2004
Fact Sheet: Making America More Secure by Transforming Our
Military
"Over the coming decade, we will deploy a more agile and more
flexible force, which means that more of our troops will be
stationed and deployed from here at home. We will move some of our
troops and capabilities to new locations, so they can surge quickly
to deal with unexpected threats. We'll take advantage of 21st
century military technologies to rapidly deploy increased combat
power. The new plan will help us fight and win these wars of the
21st century. It will strengthen our alliances around the world,
while we build new partnerships to better preserve the peace. It
will reduce the stress on our troops and our military
families."
President George W. Bush August 16, 2004
Today's Presidential Action
- President Bush today announced the most comprehensive
restructuring of U.S. military forces overseas since the end of the
Korean War. By closing bases no longer needed to meet Cold War
threats that have ended, this new initiative will bring home many
Cold War-era forces while deploying more flexible and rapidly
deployable capabilities in strategic locations around the
world.
- Taking advantage of 21st century military technologies, the
plan will increase U.S. military capabilities and combat power in
every part of the world; improve our cooperation with, and our
ability to defend, allies; and strengthen our ability to deter
aggression -- all while reducing the number of U.S. forces
stationed at overseas bases.
- The plan will make America safer by better preparing our
military to address the new dangers associated with rogue nations,
global terrorism, and weapons of mass destruction.
- Over the next ten years, the President's plan will close
hundreds of U.S. facilities overseas and bring home about 60,000 to
70,000 uniformed personnel and approximately 100,000 family members
and civilian employees.
- The plan will give our service members more time on the home
front and fewer moves over a career. It will give military spouses
fewer job changes and offer greater stability for their families.
And it will save the taxpayers money, by closing hundreds of
unneeded facilities around the world.
Goals of Our Plan for a 21st Century Military
- Expand U.S. defense relationships with allies and build new
partnerships. Posture changes will increase our ability to carry
out our defense commitments more effectively. The U.S. presence
will be tailored to optimally balance our 21st century military
requirements, our relationships with allies and partners, local
conditions, and the impact of a U.S. presence on host nations.
- Develop flexibility to contend with uncertainty. Global threats
to our national security can defy prediction. Therefore, the United
States will develop new and expanded security relationships to
emphasize flexibility in force posture.
- Provide for both a regional and global forward presence. The
demands of new threats require forces deployed overseas to be ready
for missions anywhere in the world, regardless of where the forces
are based -- while we must be prepared to act regionally and
locally and to maintain our commitments to NATO and other
allies.
- Enable rapid power projection. Our overseas force realignment
must improve rapid response capabilities for distant contingencies,
because our forces will not likely fight where they are stationed.
This requires an updated transport infrastructure to facilitate
movement of forces, prepositioned equipment along transport routes,
and lean command structures for deployable operations.
- Focus on capabilities instead of numbers. Leveraging U.S.
advantages in speed, reach, precision, knowledge, and combat power
is now the defining concept for military action. The number of
forward-based forces in a given area is no longer an accurate
representation of the effective military capability that the U.S.
can bring to bear.
Background
Our military global posture, developed to defend against Cold
War adversaries, is not optimized to meet today's threats to our
national security. Following World War II and the Korean War, our
global posture focused on threats to specific regions and tailored
our military presence to those regions. Our Cold War posture was
established with the certainty that we knew our adversaries and
where potential battles would be fought. But with the demise of the
Soviet Union, once-familiar threats gave way to less predictable
dangers. The lessons of the last 15 years teach us that we often
send our forces to unpredictable places. The Cold War strategy of
placing heavy forces in specific locations to defend against a
known adversary needs to be changed to more effectively deal with
today's threats.
It is no longer relevant to measure America's war-fighting
capability by the number of troops and equipment in a particular
country or region. During the 1990s, our military began a
transformation from the industrial age to the information age. In
this age, reach, stealth, precision, knowledge, and combat power,
and not just the size of forces, allow us to dominate the
battlespace. We learned that small, highly trained and networked
units, platforms, and even individual warriors can have an effect
on the battlefield that was previously reserved for much larger
formations. Today, one high-tech ship or tank or aircraft can
deliver the same combat power that once required ten ships or tanks
or aircraft.
The Bush Administration is working to transform our forces to
more effectively confront the dangers of the 21st century and
better protect America and our vital interests. Early in 2001, the
Bush Administration adopted a new defense strategy that recognized
the changing nature of warfare and the need for the Department of
Defense to transform its institutions, its way of doing business,
and its structures, both within the United States and abroad, in
order to meet the challenges of the new era.
The 9/11 attacks magnified the new era of uncertainty that the
Administration had previously recognized and had begun to prepare
for in the 2001 defense strategy. Operations in Afghanistan -- and
the global war on terror more broadly -- brought to the forefront
the need to conduct a strategy-based review of our global defense
posture. That review, conducted in close consultation with Congress
and our allies, has served as the cornerstone of the President's
defense transformation agenda.
Outline of Changes
Europe: Our efforts will support NATO's own transformation. We
aim to eliminate Cold War infrastructures that are no longer
relevant to today's security needs, replacing them with more
flexible, deployable forces and headquarters. Our future posture
will contain forward forces that are rapidly deployable for early
entry into conflict both in Europe and beyond.
- Heavy forces designed for a land war in Europe will return to
the U.S.; they will be replaced by advanced, deployable
capabilities and airborne units, supported by advanced training
facilities and high-capacity mobility infrastructure.
- Ground, air, and naval headquarters will be streamlined and
consolidated.
- Special forces, both forward-stationed and rotational, will
increase in importance; they will be positioned for ease of
movement both within and outside of Europe.
The Middle East Region: Cooperation and access provided by
coalition partners during Operations Enduring Freedom and Iraqi
Freedom provide us with a solid basis for other forms of future
cooperation.
- We will maintain, and in some cases upgrade, sites for
rotational forces and contingency purposes, supported by forward
headquarters and advanced training facilities.
- Rotational air, ground, and sea forces will provide presence,
and assurance to our allies and partners, without permanence.
- While we desire close relationships with Afghanistan and Iraq
that will allow us to continue to play a positive role in their
rebuilding efforts and in long-term regional security, any decision
on long-term U.S. presence in these countries is a sovereign choice
for their people and governments.
Asia: We will improve our ability to deter, dissuade, and defeat
challenges in Asia through strengthened long-range strike
capabilities, streamlined and consolidated headquarters, and a
network of access arrangements.
- The forward stationing of additional expeditionary maritime
capabilities in the Pacific will enable prompt and effective
military action both regionally and globally.
- Advanced strike assets will be stationed in the Western
Pacific.
- In Northeast Asia we are working with our strongest allies to
restructure our military presence and command structures while
simultaneously improving capabilities in the region.
- In Central and Southeast Asia we are working to establish a
network of sites to provide training opportunities and contingency
access both for conventional and special forces.
Africa and Latin America: We will expand our cooperative
security relationships in Latin America and Africa to help partners
meet the challenges they face.
- We will enhance regional training, assist partners in building
capacity for counter-terrorism and counter-narcotics, and maintain
contingency access for remote areas.
- We have no plans for Main Operating Bases in these
regions.
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© 2003 The Acronym Institute.
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