Monday, March 28, 2016

U.S. military’s ability to fight major overseas war in doubt

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“An army of deer led by a lion is more to be feared than and army of lions led by a deer.” – Chabrias

“War is as much a matter of money as it is of arms.” – Thucydides.

  Like everything else the Left has gained control of the U.S. Armed Forces have been repurposed to promote social justice rather than win wars. But of even greater concern are the facts that America’s political leadership lacks the will to win a war and the U.S. Federal Government is broke and lacks the money to finance any future war. Furthermore,  the Democrat party has demonstrated time and again that it will seek to undermine and sabotage any U.S. military intervention, particularly if the operation was initiated by a Republican administration. Our NATO allies in Europe are quickly destroying themselves by allowing unchecked Muslim migration into their lands. They will soon be beyond any help the U.S. Military will be able to render them. For all those reasons and more the U.S. Government should not contemplate any military interventions. Certainly none that do not involve defending American sovereign territory and directly protecting American lives.

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Beneath the positive press the military receives for preparing to mold women into the nation’s first female ground warriors this year, there is another story far more basic to war fighting.
Some lawmakers are warning that budget cuts, a troop drawdown and a decade and a half of wars have created spotty combat readiness, overburdened forces, more fatal accidents and beat-up weapons.
Weeks of congressional testimony from the top brass on next year’s $524 billion defense budget shows that many Armybrigades and Air Force squadrons are less ready. The Marine Corps lacks sufficient aircraft to fully train pilots. The Armyand Marine Corps can wage small wars but doubt they can meet the demands of a major conflict against, say, China orRussia, in a time frame called for in official military strategy.
After this sober news, the House Armed Services Committee sounded the alarm: “Concerns are growing louder and more frequent about the real-life consequences of cuts to personnel, training, equipment and other military resources as the security situation around the world becomes more precarious by the day.”
Rep. Mac Thornberry, Texas Republican and committee chairman, issued scary statistics. The Marine Corps’ major, or “Class A,” accident rate has shot up from an average of 2.15 per 100,000 flying hours to 3.96.
“We track this very closely, and the simple fact is that we don’t have enough airplanes to meet the training requirements for the entire force,” said Gen. Robert Neller, Marine commandant. “The force that’s deployed is trained and ready.”
“Our ability to meet other regional requirements for major contingency plans, we would build to do that, but we would probably not be able to do it within the time frame that the current plans call for us to arrive to participate in that conflict,” Gen. Neller said.
Gen. Mark MilleyArmy chief of staff, said rotary pilots need a minimum of 14 flying hours a month to stay sharp but are getting only 10 hours. Meanwhile, the Army’s major accident rates are increasing.
“It does have our concern,” he testified. “Our aircraft accidents have increased, and we’re very concerned about it.”
Gen. Milley said the force, cut from more than 490,000 to a planned 450,000, is sufficient for counterterrorism missions in Afghanistan and Iraq. But the overriding strategy of being able to fight a major overseas war is in doubt.
“If that were to happen, then I have great concerns in terms of readiness of our force, the Army forces to be able to deal with that in a timely manner,” he said. “I think the cost, both in terms of time, casualties and troops, and the ability to accomplish military objectives would be very significant.”
The reason: The overall status of Army Combat Brigade teams to mobilize and deploy has dropped.
The Army supplies about 70 percent of troops and equipment requested by combatant commanders and has suffered nearly 70 percent of all war casualties since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.
“So you’ve got the largest force, the largest demand, the largest stress and the least budget,” he said.
Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman John McCain, Arizona Republican, has taken to issuing a readiness report at each service’s budget hearing.

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