The old CNO, Adm. Greenert,
has left and the new CNO, Adm. John Richardson, has taken over. Regular readers know that ComNavOps has been
highly critical of Greenert, considering him to be one of the worst CNOs ever. Will Adm. Richardson be an improvement? Time will tell. Let’s take a look at his first formal effort,
his vision for the Navy as laid out in his “Design for Maintaining Maritime
Superiority” document (1).
The document begins by
identifying three global forces that he claims are impacting the environment in
which the Navy must operate. They are,
- Maritime traffic
- The global information system
- Technology
There’s nothing wrong with
that list and certainly they do impact the global security environment but the
list omits a couple of key forces that have a greater impact.
Competition for Resources – the competition for resources is increasing and
since the world’s land masses are essentially 100% claimed, new resources can
only be obtained by taking them from someone else. China , for example, is seizing the South and East China Seas
and working to subjugate surrounding countries in large measure to obtain more
resources. Russia is working to secure more resources from surrounding
countries and the Middle East .
Evil – Evil
is a palpable human force and is on the rise as evidenced by ISIS , Russia , China , Iran , and NKorea.
Evil does not behave as we do, does not honor agreements, does not
respect boundaries, and does not hesitate to engage in barbaric acts. Left unchecked, evil expands – always. To paraphrase, all that is needed for evil to
succeed is for good men to do nothing.
So, the document stumbles
right out of the gate by failing to recognize a couple of the major forces at
play which are shaping the global environment and should be shaping our
response.
Moving on, the document then
proceeds to explicitly name our potential enemies: Russia , China , Iran , and NKorea.
Interestingly, Islamic Jihadism is not named. Well, this is a vast improvement over CNO
Greenert who refused to name China as even a competitor let alone an enemy and refused
to discuss incidents out of fear of escalating tensions. At least now we’ve mustered the courage to
speak our enemy’s names (excepting Islamic Jihad).
Next, CNO discusses “Lines
of Effort” through which the Navy will meet its requirements.
- Strengthen naval power
- High velocity learning
- Teamwork and leadership
- Partnerships
Strengthening naval power
comes close to the mark but the discussion gets bogged down in information
warfare rather than recognizing that, ultimately, it’s about explosive power
and numbers. Warfare has not
fundamentally changed throughout history and failing to recognize that cannot
lead anywhere good.
The other three “Lines” are
just buzzword bingo. High velocity
learning - seriously? All in all, a very
poor effort at “Lines of Effort”.
In summary, this is a better
effort than his predecessor’s but still weak.
CNO Richardson is not off to a strong start. We’ll keep watching and hope for better.
You know why Islamic jihad isnt mentioned of course, they main funders and supporters are considered 'allies'
ReplyDeleteThis was the 'nuclear tech guy', so Im curious why he got the job- did no one else want it?
Isnt it highly unusual for two CNOs in a row to come from submarine branch ( and both were CO of USS honululu at some stage)