“The
security environment is becoming more complex with our adversaries’ determined
pursuit of advanced technologies across multiple domains."
Russia and China Have Plans to Make
Sure They Can Fight America (And Win)
The post-Cold War unipolar moment of
American military dominance is over. Instead, the United States increasingly
faces a multipolar world where peer-level competitors have military capability
that increasing match Washington’s own.
“The military environment has
shifted from the existence of the United States as the single power able to
dominate challengers and to deter aggression through conventional means to one
in which foreign militaries are emerging with near-peer and, in some areas,
peer capabilities,” Defense Intelligence Agency director Lt. Gen. Robert Ashley
testified before the Senate Armed Services Committee on March 6.
“Adversaries have studied the
American way of conflict and have developed, and will continue to develop,
capabilities to mitigate or upend longstanding U.S. military dominance in all
warfighting domains—terrestrial, maritime, air, space, and cyber—raising the
complexity of the threat environment and risk to the United States. Competitor
states will employ all diplomatic, economic, political, and covert mechanisms
of influence and coercion available to advance their agendas. Many states will
continue to view nuclear weapons as both the guarantor of regime survival and a
critical capability in a conflict with a conventionally superior adversary.”
As one might expect, the two main
threats are Russia and China.
“China and Russia present the
greatest threat of developing new military capabilities using emerging and
disruptive technologies,” Ashley said. “Major military powers will continue to
emphasize development of more capable ballistic and cruise missiles. China’s
People’s Liberation Army (PLA) is developing and fielding numerous advanced,
long-range land-attack and anti-ship cruise missiles, some capable of reaching
supersonic speeds, operated from ground, air, ship, and submarine platforms.
Developments in hypersonic propulsion will revolutionize warfare by providing
the ability to strike targets more quickly, at greater distances, and with
greater firepower. China is also developing increasingly sophisticated
ballistic missile warheads and hypersonic glide vehicles in an attempt to
counter ballistic missile defense systems.
Russia claims a new class of
hypersonic glide vehicle under development will allow Russian strategic
missiles to penetrate missile defense systems. Iran is pursuing long-range,
precision land-attack cruise missiles as well as development of more powerful
space launch vehicles—boosters that would be capable of ICBM ranges if
configured for that purpose.”
Additionally, new technological
advances are eroding America’s traditional military dominance that it has held
since the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union. “Developments in novel materials
will enable operations in extreme environments. Advances in photonics
will permit significant improvements in military communications, remote
sensing, navigation, stealth, and directed-energy weapons,” Ashley said. “The
IoT [internet of Things] will offer advanced connectivity to devices, systems,
sensors, and services. Atomic sensors will allow for navigation in
GPS-denied and electronic warfare environments. The rapid development of cyber
technologies, particularly quantum technologies, IoT, supercomputers, and
artificial intelligence, is enabling new defensive and offensive military
capabilities.
Adversaries are giving priority to researching
quantum-enabled communications and quantum computing, which could supply the
means to field highly secure communication systems and eventually to break
certain encryption algorithms. The challenge for predicting the next emerging
and disruptive technology for the future is anticipating the follow-on effects
of seemingly innocuous technologies that are evolving today.”
Ashley offered some sobering
conclusions. “The security environment is becoming more complex with our
adversaries’ determined pursuit of advanced technologies across multiple
domains to include cyber, space, and WMD [weapons of mass destruction],
expanding regional and global ambitions and the serious, persistent threat from
terrorism,” Ashley said. “These risks pose an increasing challenge to our
warfighters, decisionmakers, and the Intelligence Community.”
Dave Majumdar is the defense editor
for The National Interest. You can
follow him on Twitter: @davemajumdar.
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