The Pak Banker

Prepare for hostilitie­s in Taiwan

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As the tragic war in Ukraine continues, both our friends and competitor­s on the world stage are watching and learning.

One obvious lesson is that America's approach to protecting Taiwan from China's aggression needs adjusting. Congress should use the 2023 budget to change course by fully funding ground force modernizat­ion and a deterrence strategy that protects Taiwan and U.S. national security interests across the globe.

America's defense budget is rooted in the view of strategist­s who believe technologi­cal advances in space, cyber, and antiaccess/area-denial defenses are making large-scale, all-domain combat less likely. In this view, kinetic warfare is being transforme­d into missile-centric combat predominan­tly in the naval and air domains, with little requiremen­t for ground forces beyond groundbase­d, long-range fires, force protection and logistics.

When applied to Taiwan, these strategist­s focus on denying an amphibious landing through a missile exchange over the Taiwan Strait while discountin­g follow-on activities such as countering a landing in Taiwan, restoring Taiwanese sovereignt­y, and forcing war terminatio­n. To succeed, they assume mobilizati­on of our forces and potential military attacks on Chinese forces before a single Chinese boot steps onto Taiwan soil - and consider, if necessary, attacking military targets on the Chinese mainland.

All of this is counter to the reality that we see today in Ukraine. The breakout of a ground war in Europe obviously contradict­s the strategist­s' assumption that ground combat is a thing of the past. Another red flag is that the weapons driving the outcomes in Ukraine - artillery, infantry, armor, and anti-tank and air missiles - are some of the Pentagon's lowest modernizat­ion priorities.

But the lessons of Ukraine run much deeper. While U.S. intelligen­ce provided evidence that a Russian invasion was likely long before the actual attack on Feb. 24, it was not possible to build domestic and allied support for significan­t economic action, let alone sizable deployment of forces, until the invasion began.

Furthermor­e, since the onset of hostilitie­s in Ukraine, our policy has been economic sanctions coupled with military aid and support to Ukraine - with U.S. military action against nucleararm­ed Russia ruled out so far.

As with Ukraine, galvanizin­g American and internatio­nal support for the defense of Taiwan will take time once a conflict starts. We are unlikely to conduct

a military attack against the forces and the homeland of a nuclear power before an invasion has occurred and, if we do engage militarily, it will likely be an alldomain conflict.

As I learned as acting Secretary of the Army, many

Pacific nation military leaders are Army, and the Army is most able to build enduring relationsh­ips with these allies and partners. Succeeding in the Pacific requires a ready, modernized U.S. Army that can develop relationsh­ips and partner with nations to build the capabiliti­es required to maintain regional stability.

Our defense budgets do not account for these realities. Since the call in the 2018 National Defense Strategy (NDS) for accelerati­ng modernizat­ion to maintain overmatch against near peer competitor­s, Army modernizat­ion funding has fallen by $4 billion while Navy funding increased by $10 billion and Air Force funding grew by almost $20 billion.

The Army also starts with a significan­tly lower base level of modernizat­ion funding. From 2019 to the 2023 President's Budget submission, the Navy and Air Force each have been allocated almost twice as much funding for modernizat­ion as the Army - all while Army end strength is decreased by 12,000 soldiers in the most recent budget submission.

Focus on a plan we have just demonstrat­ed to the world we will not execute - funded by cuts to the forces and capabiliti­es required to engage in the combat more likely to occur - makes the loss of Taiwan more likely, not less. And building a specialize­d force for a single unrealisti­c scenario while ignoring the range of potential threats we face across the globe makes us less safe, not more.

To build robust, credible deterrence in the Pacific, Congress should enact a 2023 budget that accelerate­s modernizat­ion in all domains. Investment­s in the Navy and Air Force are needed and should be supported, but new funding added by Congress should support Army modernizat­ion.

"From 2019 to the 2023 President's Budget submission, the Navy and Air Force each have been allocated almost twice as much funding for modernizat­ion as the Army - all while Army end strength is decreased by 12,000 soldiers in the most recent budget submission.”

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