By Alan Caruba
I began March with a look at the way President Obama is undermining the U.S.
military and did not think I would have to return to this topic for a while. I
was wrong.
A March 25 article in The Washington Times was titled “Obama to Kill Navy’s Tomahawk, Hellfire Missile
Programs in Budget Decimation” and on March 21, The Wall Street Journal
published a commentary, “America’s Incredible Shrinking Navy.”
When
you add those to The New York Times February 23 article, “Pentagon Plans to
Shrink Army to Pre-World War II Level”, you've got sufficient reason to begin to
realize something very ominous is occurring.
This concerned is heightened by the way dozens of high ranking officers are,
in the view of some observers, being purged. A number of retired generals are
speaking out about it. One of them, retired Army Major General Paul Vallely has
charged that Obama is “intentionally weakening and gutting our military and
reducing us as a superpower, and anyone in the ranks who disagrees or speaks out
is being purged.” Retired Army Major General Patrick Brady agrees saying, “There
is no doubt he is intent on emasculating the military and will fire anyone who
disagrees with him.”
The world, over the course of human civilization, has always been a dangerous
place. Much of the history of mankind is a history of wars, large and small. In
the last century the U.S. military was involved in two world wars, a Korean
conflict, a war in Vietnam, and the Gulf War to drive out Hussein’s Iraqi forces
after he invaded Kuwait.
The Russian seizure of Crimea in the wake of the protests that has left
Ukraine in disarray has put all of Europe on edge and raised questions about the
readiness of NATO. A look around the world sees China increasing its military
strength, particularly at sea.
The Middle East to include much of northern Africa is a hotbed of turmoil.
And, of course, Iran continues to contribute to it, aiding Syria’s regime along
with the Russians, supporting Palestinian terror organizations that threaten
Israel, while pursuing its own nuclear weapon capabilities.
This would hardly seem a good time to undermine U.S. military capabilities,
but that is exactly what is occurring thanks to President Obama.
The Washington Times reported that “President Barack Obama is seeking to
abolish two highly successful missile programs that experts say have helped the
U.S. Navy maintain military superiority for the past several decades.” The
Tomahawk missile program, under Obama’s 2015 budget proposal, would be
completely eliminated by fiscal year 2016. Seth Cropsey, the director of the
Hudson Institute’s Center for American Sea-power, said “This really moves the
U.S. away from a position of influence and military dominance.”
Writing
in The New York Times, Steve Cohen, a former director of the U.S. Naval
Institute, noted that “The Navy is supposed to be ‘forward deployed’ to provide
the president with tools powerful enough to deal with potential threats and
trouble spots.” For decades since the end of World War Two the U.S Navy has
patrolled the world’s sea lanes to protect trade between nations, but Cohen
said, “The rest of the world isn't unpatrolled, but it is under-patrolled”
noting that “Some 90% of the world’s trade moves by sea. Much of that can be
disrupted by attacks on a handful of choke points readily apparent to pirates,
terrorists, and rogue nations.”
“With the U.S Navy arguably at its smallest since 1917, we don’t have many
ships that are actually at sea. Only 35% of the Navy’s entire fleet is deployed,
fewer than 100 ships.”
U.S. air power has been under assault as well by the Obama regime. In June of
last year, David A. Deptula, a retired Air Force three-star general and senior
military scholar at the Air Force Academy, warned that “In the Air Force alone,
more than 30 squadrons are now grounded, along with aircrews, and maintenance
and training personnel.” Less than a year ago “The graduate schools for Air
Force, Navy and Marine combat aviators” had been cancelled. “Equipment testing
and upgrades to F-22s, F-15s, F-16s, and other aircraft have been delayed.”
In September 2013, the commandant of the Marine Corps, James F. Amos, warned
that cuts to the nation’s defense and security spending that occurred from 1990
to 2001, reduced its total active-duty strength by 32%. In 2001 the Corps
totaled approximately 172,000 Marines, down from 197,000 in the 1990 Gulf War.
When 9/11 occurred, the Marines “found themselves short of critical capabilities
in intelligence collection and analysis, in communication and in mobility on
land, sea and in the air.” These days the Marines are facing further
reductions.
It will be up to Congress to eliminate the sequestration cuts and the Obama
regime proposals to ensure that the U.S. military is restored to a state of
readiness. If it rubber stamps the reductions that have been occurring for more
than a decade, the ability of the nation to respond to an attack on our homeland
or any of our allies will be highly limited.
You can be sure that those nations unfriendly to our future are fully aware
of this and the defeat of our armed forces could occur on the battlefield
because it has already occurred here.
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