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Outside View: American decline -- pure poppycock!
by Harlan Ullman
Washington (UPI) Jul 17, 2013


Hagel orders cuts for Pentagon headquarters
Washington, District Of Columbia (AFP) July 17, 2013 - Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel has ordered a 20 percent cut in funding for the Pentagon's top civilian and military headquarters by 2019, saying everyone has to "do their part."

Hagel announced the order Tuesday during a visit to a naval air base in Jacksonville, Florida, portraying the move as a signal that no element of the military's bureaucracy would be immune from budget pressures.

Previous Pentagon leaders also have tried -- with little success -- to scale back the top-heavy bureaucracy.

These past efforts have taken aim at the large number of well-paid civilian officials and senior officers who work for the Joint Staff and the Office of the Secretary of Defense, a mini-administration that supports the Pentagon chief.

Hagel's spokesman, George Little, said the newly proposed reduction would result in savings of roughly $1.5 billion to $2 billion over five years, which by itself would not solve the Defense Department's budget woes.

While acknowledging the cut "isn't going to fix the problem," Hagel said "everybody has got to do their part," including the top brass and most senior officials.

"So everybody is going to have to do something here. Everybody is going to have to pay a price. Everybody is going to have to make a contribution," Hagel told an audience of troops and civilian employees.

The US military's top ranking officer, General Martin Dempsey, also issued a similar order, directing a 20 percent cut in the offices of Joint Staff, Hagel said.

The precise number of civilian and officer positions that would be cut has yet to be decided, Little said in a statement.

Former defense secretary Robert Gates in 2010 ordered a three-year freeze on expanding staff for his office, the Joint Staff and the major military combatant commands.

But the number of personnel has grown by 15 percent since then, according to a report by Defense News.

Hagel made his announcement as part of a three-day "listening tour" of military bases in southern US states, where he has held town-hall style meetings with troops and their families worried about budget uncertainties.

His trip came as the Pentagon comes under growing fiscal pressure, with automatic budget cuts forcing a reduction of $37 billion through the end of the current fiscal year.

To absorb this year's reductions, Hagel imposed an 11-day furlough for most of the Defense Department's civilian workforce.

With no sign of Congress breaking an impasse over the federal budget, the Pentagon faces the prospect of yet more automatic cuts next year that could force civilian layoffs and other measures.

Hagel has warned the deeper cuts will undermine the US military's combat power and threaten national security interests.

A specter is haunting the United States. That specter is one of American decline. But this specter isn't merely exaggerated. It is poppycock.

Those who see in America the conditions that led to the fall of the Roman Empire or the catastrophic Grecian wars between Athens (read America) and Sparta (read China) are simply wrong.

The United States or any other state could never remain the world's colossus and singular dominant power forever.

The end of World War II with the destruction of Europe and Asia granted the United States a unique moment in history. However, an ascending Soviet Union ultimately checked the unilateral authority and influence of the United States.

And the inevitable diffusion of all forms of global power, along with the rebuilding of Europe and Asia, made it impossible for any state to exist as the world's sole superpower.

Unfortunately, too many who long for the days when the United States seemed dominant refuse to understand that the current realities in which all forms of power are diffusing create new opportunities, opportunities that the United States could readily exploit provided it is prepared to shed rigid beliefs about the past and the virtues of unilateralism for a new and more relevant mindset.

In absolute terms, the totality of U.S. power is unchanged. In relative terms, American power of course has been diluted. Comparative advantage and the growth of other economies have enhanced global competition. And burgeoning economies have magnified the need for energy, enriching oil and natural gas producers whose treasure chests in turn created huge financial leverage and investment power.

Meanwhile, the United States' unchallenged military power has proven largely ineffective in waging war against adversaries who lacked armies, navies and air forces and in Iraq and Afghanistan where nation-building and economic development required other tools and cyber dangers transcend any fixed boundaries once ascribed only to departments and ministries of defense.

The obvious consequence is a relative dilution of U.S. influence and authority.

And there is another wrinkle.

Metrics for defining measures of power and influence are still in adolescence. Harvard's Joseph Nye has been credited for creating the concept of "hard" and "soft" power. Yet, both terms are qualitative and not quantitative hence susceptible to psychological or political interpretation. Further, distinctions between hard and soft don't offer solutions or policy prescriptions other than descriptions that may or may not be relevant.

In business, when conditions change, to succeed, organizations respond. That IBM no longer builds computers and Xerox no longer is famous for copying machines are salutary examples of change. So too, U.S. policy must recognize that the emergence of new power centers creates opportunities as well as challenges.

How then should the United States respond?

First, establishing new metrics for measuring and understanding power is a good first step. Those who see China eclipsing the United States use as a simplistic measure gross domestic product. At some future date, China with a population four times greater than America's may achieve a larger GDP. But what does that signify? And using GDP alone as a measure of power is akin to basing an individual's health solely on height or some single index.

The total assets of the United States less its natural resources are estimated at around $100 trillion. Deduct public and private debt of about $30 trillion leaves net assets at the $70 trillion level. With an annual GDP currently about $17 trillion, the aggregate wealth of the United States is between $80 trillion-$90 trillion.

What is China's net worth? Even given an equivalent GDP and China's is about half of America's today, China is light-years away from overtaking the United States in net assets.

The point isn't whether this metric is the better. Instead, we need new means to evaluate relative and absolute power.

Second, economics now trump military power in expanding not only influence but in achieving foreign policy objectives. Economic disparity, disadvantage and dislocation are central drivers of instability in much of the world. Egypt is Exhibit A.

Hence, moving forward on the Atlantic and Pacific trade and investment treaties is crucial.

Third, partnerships are vital beyond trade and investment. In security terms, expanding the reach of NATO to match up with the Shanghai Cooperative Organization is a good example. Despite the intense reverberations of Edward Snowden's revelations about U.S. surveillance and spying, new efforts for cooperation in cyber and counter-terror must be undertaken.

Fourth and most important, creating a new and optimistic mindset about confronting and co-opting the realties in which relative levels of unmatched U.S. power no longer offer the same advantages of the past is essential. This requires the magic ingredient of leadership begetting followership.

The challenge in this new age remains: Who shall lead? And will anyone listen?

(Harlan Ullman is chairman of the Killowen Group, which advises leaders of government and business, and senior adviser at Washington's Atlantic Council.)

(United Press International's "Outside View" commentaries are written by outside contributors who specialize in a variety of important issues. The views expressed do not necessarily reflect those of United Press International. In the interests of creating an open forum, original submissions are invited.)

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