By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
The Return of Total War
Every age had its
kind of war, its limiting conditions, and its peculiar preconceptions,” the defense
theorist Carl von Clausewitz wrote in the early nineteenth century. There is no
doubt that Clausewitz was right. And yet it is surprisingly difficult to
characterize war at any given moment in time; doing so becomes easier only with
hindsight. Harder still is predicting what kind of war the future might bring.
When war changes, the new shape it takes almost always comes as a surprise.
For most of the
second half of the twentieth century, American strategic planners faced a
fairly static challenge: a Cold War in
which superpower conflict was kept on ice by nuclear deterrence, turning hot
only in proxy fights that were costly but containable. The collapse of the
Soviet Union brought that era to an end. In Washington during the 1990s, war
became a matter of assembling coalitions to intervene in discrete conflicts
when bad actors invaded their neighbors, stoked civil or ethnic violence, or
massacred civilians.
After the shock of the 9/11 attacks in 2001, attention shifted
to terrorist organizations, insurgents, and other nonstate groups. The
resulting “war on terror” pushed thinking about state-on-state conflict onto
the sidelines. War was a major feature of the post-9/11 period, of course. But
it was a highly circumscribed phenomenon, often limited in scale and waged in
remote locations against shadowy adversaries. For most of this century, the
prospect of a major war among states was a lower priority for American military
thinkers and planners, and whenever it took center stage, the context was
usually a potential contest with China that would materialize only in the
far-off future, if ever.
Then, in 2022, Russia
launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine.
The result has been the largest land war in Europe since World War II. Although
forces under Russian and Ukrainian command are the only troops fighting on the
ground, the war has reshaped geopolitics by drawing in dozens of other
countries. The United States and its NATO allies have offered unprecedented
financial and material support to Ukraine; meanwhile, China, Iran, and North
Korea have all assisted Russia in crucial ways. Less than two years after
Russia’s invasion, Hamas carried out its brutal October 7 terrorist attack on
Israel, provoking a highly lethal and destructive Israeli assault on Gaza. The
conflict quickly widened into a complex regional affair, involving multiple
states and several capable nonstate actors.
In
both Ukraine and the Middle East,
what has become clear is that the relatively narrow scope that defined war
during the post-9/11 era has dramatically widened. An era of limited war has
ended; an age of comprehensive conflict has begun. Indeed, what the world is
witnessing today is akin to what theorists in the past have called “total war,” in which combatants draw on vast
resources, mobilize their societies, prioritize warfare over all other state
activities, attack a broad variety of targets, and reshape their economies and
those of other countries. However, owing to new technologies and the deep links
of the globalized economy, today’s wars are not merely a repeat of older
conflicts.
These developments
should compel strategists and planners to rethink how fighting happens today
and, crucially, how they should prepare for war going forward. Getting ready
for the kind of war the United States would most likely face in the future
might help the country avoid such a war by strengthening its ability to deter
its main rival. To deter an increasingly assertive China from taking
steps that might lead to war with the United States, such as blockading or
attacking Taiwan, Washington must convince Beijing that doing so wouldn’t be
worth it and that China might not win the resulting war. But to make deterrence
credible in an age of comprehensive conflict, the United States needs to show
that it is prepared for a different kind of war—drawing on the lessons of
today’s big wars to prevent an even bigger one tomorrow.
The Continuum of Conflict
Just under a decade
ago, there was a growing consensus among many experts about how the conflict
would reconfigure itself in the years ahead. It would be faster, waged through
cooperation between people and intelligent machines, and heavily reliant on autonomous
tools such as drones. Space and cyberspace would be increasingly important. The
conventional conflict would involve a surge in “anti-access/area-denial”
capabilities—tools and techniques that would limit the reach and
maneuverability of militaries beyond their shores, particularly in the
Indo-Pacific. Nuclear threats would persist, but they would prove limited
compared with the existential perils of the past.
Some of these
predictions have been borne out; others have been turned on their heads.
Artificial intelligence has in fact further enabled the proliferation and
utility of uncrewed systems both in the air and under the water. Drones have
indeed transformed battlefields—and the need for counter-drone capabilities has
skyrocketed. The strategic importance of space, including the commercial space
sector, has been made clear, most recently by Ukraine’s reliance on the Starlink satellite network for Internet connectivity.
On the other hand,
Russian President Vladimir Putin has repeatedly made veiled threats
to use his country’s nuclear weapons and has even stationed some of them in
Belarus. Meanwhile, China’s historic modernization and
diversification of its nuclear capabilities have ignited alarm over the
possibility that a conventional conflict could escalate to the most extreme
level. The expansion and improvement of China’s arsenal has also transformed
and complicated the dynamics of nuclear deterrence since what was historically
a bipolar challenge between the United States and Russia is now tripolar.
Ukrainian police near a building hit by a Russian
airstrike, Zaporizhzhia, Ukraine, September 2024
What few, if any, defense
theorists foresaw was the broadening of war that the past few years have
witnessed, as the array of features that shape conflict expanded. What
theorists call “the continuum of conflict” has changed. In an earlier era, one
might have seen the terrorism and insurgency
of Hamas, Hezbollah, and the Houthis as inhabiting the low end of the
spectrum, the armies waging conventional warfare in Ukraine as residing in the
middle, and the nuclear threats shaping Russia’s war and China’s growing
arsenal as sitting at the high end. Today, however, there is no sense of mutual
exclusivity; the continuum has returned but also collapsed. In Ukraine, “robot
dogs” patrol the ground and autonomous drones launch missiles from the sky amid
trench warfare that looks like World War I—all under the specter of nuclear
weapons. In the Middle East, combatants have combined sophisticated air and
missile defense systems with individual shooting attacks by armed men riding
motorcycles. In the Indo-Pacific, Chinese and Philippine forces face off over a
single dilapidated ship while the skies and seas surrounding Taiwan get
squeezed by threatening maneuvers from China’s air force and navy.
The emergence of
sea-based struggles marks a major departure from the post-9/11 era when the
conflict was largely oriented around ground threats. Back then, most maritime
attacks were sea-to-ground, and most air attacks were air-to-ground. Today,
however, the maritime domain has become a site of direct conflict. Ukraine, for
example, has taken out more than 20 Russian ships in the Black Sea, and control
of that critical waterway remains contested.
Meanwhile, Houthi attacks have largely closed the Red Sea to
commercial shipping. Safeguarding freedom of navigation has historically been a
top mission of the U.S. Navy. But its inability to ensure the security of the
Red Sea has called into question whether it would be able to fulfill that
mission in an increasingly turbulent Indo-Pacific.
The plural character
of conflict also underscores the risk of being lured by today’s weapon of
choice, which might turn out to be a flash in the pan. Compared with the
post-9/11 era, more countries now have greater access to capital and more R
& D capacity, allowing them to respond more quickly and adeptly to new
weapons and technologies by developing countermeasures. This exacerbates a
familiar dynamic that the military scholar J. F. C. Fuller described as “the
constant tactical factor”—the reality that “every improvement in weapons has
eventually been met by a counter-improvement which has rendered the improvement
obsolete.” For example, in 2022, defense experts hailed the efficacy of
Ukraine’s precision-guided munitions as a game-changer in the war against
Russia. But by late 2023, some of those weapons’ limitations had become clear
when electronic jamming by the Russian military severely restricted their
ability to find targets on the battlefield.
All In
Another feature of
the age of comprehensive conflict is a transformation in the demography of war:
the cast of characters has become increasingly diverse. The post-9/11 wars
demonstrated the outsize impact of terrorist groups, proxies, and militias. As
those conflicts ground on, many policymakers wished they could go back to the
traditional focus on state militaries—particularly given the enormous
investments some states were making in their defenses. They should have been
careful what they wished for: state militaries are back, but nonstate groups
have hardly left the stage. The current security environment offers the
misfortune of dealing with both.
In the Middle East,
multiple state militaries are increasingly fighting or enmeshed with
surprisingly influential nonstate actors. Consider the Houthis. Although in
essence still a relatively small rebel movement, the Houthis are nevertheless
responsible for the most intense set of sea engagements the U.S. Navy has faced
since World War II, according to navy officials. With help from Iran, the
Houthis are also punching above their weight in the air by manufacturing and
deploying their drones. Meanwhile, in Ukraine, Kyiv’s regular forces are
fighting alongside cadres of international volunteers in numbers likely not
seen since the Spanish Civil War. And to augment Russia’s traditional forces,
the Kremlin has incorporated mercenaries from the Wagner paramilitary company
and sent tens of thousands of convicts to war—a practice that Ukraine’s
military recently started copying.
In this environment,
the task of building partner forces becomes even more complex than during the
post-9/11 wars. U.S. programs to build the Afghan and Iraqi militaries focused
on countering terrorist and insurgent threats to enable friendly regimes to exert
sovereignty over their territories. To help build up Ukraine’s forces for their
fight against another state military, however, the United States and its allies
have had to relearn how to teach. The Pentagon has also had to build a new kind
of coalition, convening more than 50 countries from across the world to
coordinate materiel donations to Ukraine through the Ukraine Defense Contact
Group—the most complex and most rapid effort ever undertaken to stand up a
single country’s military.
Nearly a decade ago,
we noted on world-news-research.com that although the United States had been
building militaries in fragile states since World War II, its record was
lackluster. That is no longer the case. The Pentagon’s new system has
demonstrated that it can move so quickly that material support for Ukraine has
at times been delivered within days. The system has surged in ways that many
experts (including me) thought impossible. In particular, the technical aspect
of equipping militaries has improved. For example, the U.S. Army’s use of
artificial intelligence has made it much easier for Ukraine’s military to be
able to see and understand the battlefield to make decisions, and act
accordingly. Lessons from the rapid delivery of assistance to Ukraine have also
been applied to the Israel-Hamas war; within days of the October 7 attacks,
U.S.-supplied air defense capabilities and munitions were in Israel to protect
its skies and help it respond.
Israel’s Iron
Dome intercepting Iranian rockets,
Ashkelon, Israel, October
2024
Adding further
complexity to the picture is the way that in recent years, U.S. diplomacy has
brought countries within the Indo-Pacific together and created connections
between regions. The former is illustrated by the historic U.S.-brokered
progress between Japan and South Korea, which has yielded more than 60 meetings
and military engagements between them and the United States since 2023; the
latter is represented by the creation of AUKUS, a major military partnership
joining Australia, the United Kingdom, and the United States. Less formal but
meaningful relationships have formed, as well. A grouping nicknamed “the Squad”
is composed of Australia, Japan, the Philippines, and the United States; their
defense ministers have met a few times, and their militaries ran maritime
patrols in the South China Sea earlier this year. Countries in Asia, the Middle
East, Europe, and the Western Hemisphere participated in a
U.S.-led military exercise held in the Indo-Pacific.
Taken together, these
campaigns demonstrate a modernized approach to collaborating with allies and
partners in the service of deterrence. They are increasingly integrated by
design and thus require a huge amount of work. The transformation of export
control systems to enable the AUKUS partnership, for instance, took countless
hours of collaboration among all three countries and involved scaling major
bureaucratic hurdles even though the arrangement involved two long-standing
U.S. allies.
Expanded partnerships
of this sort can be unwieldy, and adversaries and competitors will do what they
can to fracture them. U.S. partners may take ill-considered risks when facing
rivals if they believe they hold an insurance policy in the form of American
support. And deeper collaboration among Washington and its friends could be
interpreted in a way that inadvertently escalates a competitor’s perceptions of
insecurity. But overall, these tighter relationships are a net positive, and
increasing the size, scope, and scale of collaboration makes the challenge
tougher for those who seek to upend the security environment.
Avoiding Total War
Prevailing in an era
of comprehensive conflict requires a sense of urgency and vigilance and, above
all, a wide aperture. The circumscribed struggles of the post-9/11 era are
gone, and today’s wars are increasingly whole-of-society phenomena. Focusing on
boutique capabilities is shortsighted; both newer and older systems remain
relevant. Participants on and off the battlefield proliferate, and parties
increasingly collaborate. Actions and activities rarely affect just one domain;
spillage seems unavoidable.
For Washington,
understanding this new kind of total war will be essential to preparing for
contingencies in the Indo-Pacific. The United States must continue expanding
and diversifying its military posture in the region. Deterring and, if
necessary, prevailing in conflict will mean gaining access to more bases in
more places. Washington’s military support for Taiwan will be crucial. The
United States must keep improving the speed at which it can deliver assistance
to Taiwan and use more realistic conflict scenarios to inform what equipment it
sends. This aid should continue alongside efforts to encourage meaningful
personnel and organizational reform of Taiwan’s military, which would involve
prioritizing and sufficiently resourcing training (including by preparing
troops for more realistic scenarios) and further investing in asymmetric
platforms and operational concepts.
Building on U.S.
alliances and partnerships in the region will require serious and steadfast
attention. Some relationships are ripe for revitalization. U.S. relations with
India have moved slowly since the two countries announced a strategic
partnership nearly 20 years ago. But clashes between China and India since 2020
have fundamentally reshaped the trajectory of New Delhi’s approach to Beijing;
India now recognizes that this is a tense competition.
Today’s global
security environment is the most complex since the end of the Cold War.
Learning from wars that others wage can be difficult, but it is ultimately
better than learning those lessons directly. The destruction and loss of life
in Ukraine and the Middle East have been heartbreaking. In addition to helping
its allies prevail in those conflicts and fostering peace, Washington should
get ready to fight the kind of total war that has ripped apart those
places—which is the best way to avoid one.
Prevailing in an era of
comprehensive conflict requires a sense of urgency and vigilance and, above
all, a wide aperture. The circumscribed struggles of the post-9/11 era are
gone, and today’s wars are increasingly whole-of-society phenomena. Focusing on
boutique capabilities is shortsighted; both newer and older systems remain
relevant. Participants on and off the battlefield proliferate, and parties
increasingly collaborate. Actions and activities rarely affect just one domain;
spillage seems unavoidable.
For Washington,
understanding this new kind of total war will be essential to preparing for contingencies in the Indo-Pacific.
The United States must continue expanding and diversifying its military posture
in the region. Deterring and, if necessary, prevailing in conflict will mean
gaining access to more bases in more places. Washington’s military support for
Taiwan will be crucial. The United States must keep improving the speed at
which it can deliver assistance to Taiwan and use more realistic conflict
scenarios to inform what equipment it sends. This aid should continue alongside
efforts to encourage meaningful personnel and organizational reform of Taiwan’s
military, which would involve prioritizing and sufficiently resourcing training
(including by preparing troops for more realistic scenarios) and further
investing in asymmetric platforms and operational concepts.
Building on U.S.
alliances and partnerships in the region will require serious and steadfast
attention. Some relationships are ripe for revitalization. U.S. relations with
India have moved slowly since the two countries announced a strategic
partnership nearly 20 years ago. But clashes between China and India since 2020
have fundamentally reshaped the trajectory of New Delhi’s approach to Beijing;
India now recognizes that this is a tense competition.
Today’s global
security environment is the most complex since the end of the Cold War.
Learning from wars that others wage can be difficult, but it is ultimately
better than learning those lessons directly. The destruction and loss of life
in Ukraine and the Middle East have been heartbreaking. In addition to helping
its allies prevail in those conflicts and fostering peace, Washington should
get ready to fight the kind of total war that has ripped apart those
places—which is the best way to avoid one.
Houthi fighters commemorating the late Hezbollah
leader Hassan Nasrallah, Sanaa, Yemen, October 2024
But even though
Washington has now demonstrated that it can build a foreign military with
alacrity, the question will always remain as to whether it should. The cost of
transferring valuable equipment to a partner involves considerations of the
U.S. military’s readiness levels and combat credibility. Moreover, such
assistance is not merely a technical effort but a political exercise, as well,
and the system has occasionally slowed down as it wrestles with dilemmas
regarding the full implications of U.S. security aid. For example, to avoid
tripping Russia’s redlines, Washington has spent inordinate time debating
where, when, and under what circumstances Ukraine should use U.S. military
assistance. This puzzle is not new, but given the destructive abilities of the
rivals that Washington is now facing or preparing to confront, the stakes of
solving it correctly are much higher than during the post-9/11 era.
The role of defense
industrial bases in rival countries has also shaped the new contours of
war-making. In the dozens of countries supporting Ukraine, domestic defense
industries have not been able to keep up with the demand. Meanwhile, Russia’s
defense industrial base has been revived after speculations about its demise
proved to be greatly exaggerated. Although China’s support to Russia appears to
exclude lethal assistance, it has nevertheless involved Beijing’s providing
Moscow with critical technologies. And both Iran and North Korea have supported
their defense industries by selling munitions and other wares to Moscow. The
United States is not the only power to have recognized the value (both on the
battlefield and back home) of supplying partner forces and building up their
capacities; its adversaries have, as well.
Understanding the new
diversity of warfighters and the increased complexity of their relationships to
one another will be crucial in any future conflict in the Indo-Pacific. Lessons
from Ukraine have informed the Biden administration’s turbocharged effort to
strengthen Taiwan, which received foreign military financing for the first time
in 2023. More broadly, strategists should consider how future state-on-state
warfare might be combined with insurgency. They should also think through how a
panoply of actors on and off the battlefield, including nonstate groups and
commercial entities, might support the primary antagonists.
And as in Ukraine,
regional coalition building will be critical to any support Washington supplies
to Taiwan in the face of Chinese aggression. Although the number of countries
that support Taiwan’s military remains slim, Washington’s European allies seem
increasingly willing to acknowledge Taipei’s outsize relevance for regional
security and stability. Chinese support for Russia’s destabilizing war has
disabused most European leaders of the false notion that Beijing values
stability above all else. This evolution in European views was reflected by the
“strategic concept” NATO released in 2022, which noted that China’s “coercive
policies” challenge the alliance’s “interests, security and values.”
The Return of Deterrence
During the two decades
of the post-9/11 era, the concept of deterrence was rarely invoked in
Washington since the idea seemed largely irrelevant to conflicts against
nonstate actors such as al Qaeda and the Islamic State (also known as ISIS).
What a difference a few years make: today, almost every debate about U.S.
foreign policy and national security boils down to the challenge of deterrence,
which is one key to managing escalation—the task, although neither glamorous
nor gratifying, that broadly shapes Washington’s policy in both Ukraine and the
Middle East.
In this new
environment, traditional approaches to deterrence have regained relevance. One
is deterrence by denial—the act of making it difficult for an enemy to achieve
its intended objective. Denial can quell escalation even if it fails to prevent
an initial act of aggression. In the Middle East, Israel was unable to stop
Iran’s first major conventional attack on Israeli territory earlier this year,
but it largely denied Iran the benefits it hoped to gain. Israel’s military
repulsed almost all of the hundreds of Iranian missiles and drones thanks to
its sophisticated air and missile defense systems and the collaboration of the
United States and countries across the Middle East and Europe. (Shoddy Iranian
equipment also played a role.) The limited repercussions of the attack enabled
Israel to wait nearly a week to respond and to do so in a more limited way than
would have been likely had Iran’s operation been more successful.
The win was costly,
however. The United States and Israel may have spent around ten times more in
responding to Iran’s attack than Iran did in launching it. Similarly, the
Houthis have used relatively inexpensive and small-scale tools to attack ships
in the Red Sea dozens of times, disrupting a major shipping route and imposing
massive costs on the global economy. In response to the Houthis’ low-cost,
high-impact attacks, U.S. Navy ships have frequently depleted their magazines
without significantly reducing the threat. Accounting for the extended
deployments the navy has undertaken in the Middle East for deterrence purposes,
including confronting the Houthis by using munitions to counter their attacks
and strike their assets in Yemen, rebuilding and recovering ship readiness
after this fight with a small local militia amid broader regional hostilities
will wind up costing the navy at least $1 billion over the next several years.
Another traditional
means of deterrence that has resurfaced is punishment, which requires
threatening an adversary with severe consequences if it takes certain actions.
At a few key junctures, Putin’s saber rattling brought the potential for
nuclear weapons use to its highest point since the Cold War. During one
especially fraught period in October 2022, U.S. President Joe Biden and his
team worried there was a 50 percent chance that Putin would employ his nuclear
arsenal. In calls with their Russian counterparts, senior American leaders made
stern and timely warnings of “catastrophic” consequences if Moscow made good on
its threats. Those warnings worked, as did a broader effort to persuade key
Asian and European countries, most notably China and India, to publicly and
prospectively condemn any role for nuclear weapons in Ukraine. Tugging Putin
down the escalation ladder required a baseline understanding of how he viewed
threats, serious attention to the signals and noise being sent across the
entire U.S. government, and active feedback loops to ensure those assessments
were accurate—all paired with robust diplomatic engagements.
Signal Achievement
The return of total
war, with its many moving parts and elevated risks, has revived an
understanding of how signaling works in a crisis. The Biden administration
postponed a routine intercontinental ballistic missile test soon after Russia’s
invasion of Ukraine to demonstrate how responsible nuclear powers act in times
of potential escalation. This test could have inadvertently conveyed to Putin
an inaccurate signal concerning future U.S. policy at a sensitive
time—particularly as his invasion of Ukraine was stumbling, scores of countries
were coming together to support Kyiv, and Ukraine’s military was fighting
doggedly. The United States wanted to ensure that Putin picked up the right
signals about U.S. intentions and didn’t get distracted by the noise that a
missile test might have introduced.
Signaling has also
been crucial to preventing escalation in the Middle East. During three key
moments—the immediate wake of Hamas’s October 7 attacks in 2023, Iran’s drone
and missile attack on Israel in April, and the days following Israel’s
assassination of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran in July—a calibrated mix
of deft diplomacy, surges in military assets, coalition building, and
crystal-clear public messaging prevented a massive regional conflict. Just
after the October 7 attacks, Biden sent a message to Iran’s supreme leader,
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, warning against attacking U.S. personnel in the region,
and U.S. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin deployed two aircraft carriers plus
additional aircraft to the Middle East to make clear that Iran should not
escalate by directly entering the conflict. The presence of robust U.S.
capabilities such as air defense was also critical to preventing further
escalation after Iran’s large-scale attack on Israel in April. But without U.S.
partnerships with countries across the Middle East and Europe, the limits of
those capabilities would have become clear, since the efficacy of those
capabilities benefited, to some extent, from the cooperation and participation
of these countries. And following Haniyeh’s killing, U.S. Secretary of State
Antony Blinken asked the Qatari prime minister and the Jordanian foreign
minister, among other officials, to help dissuade Iran from responding. The
Pentagon also further boosted the U.S. regional military presence, including by
publicly announcing the deployment of a nuclear-powered submarine to the Middle
East.
Of course, there are
drawbacks to relying too heavily and for too long on military force in pursuit
of deterrence. So far, surging U.S. military assets in the Middle East for
deterrence purposes has been the right approach; through September, Hezbollah had
largely kept its attacks on Israel below a certain threshold rather than
overwhelmingly intervening in support of Hamas. But as time passes, the
deterrent value of military buildups abates, and they grow susceptible to the
sunk cost fallacy—that is, adversaries become accustomed to factoring in the
threat such buildups pose rather than fearing them, and they learn how to plan
around them. There are also costs to military readiness, which may create an
opening for adversaries to question the credibility of threats because they
know that Washington cannot indefinitely sustain a bulked-up presence. And
there are opportunity costs to consider. The U.S. military must juggle multiple
threats around the world while pacing itself for a long-term competition with
China. Bolstering deterrence in the Middle East over the last year has been
important, but it has inherently limited the time, attention, and resources
Washington has devoted to Indo-Pacific security.
With a Little Help From My Friends
As the United States
grapples with the challenges of deterrence on the battlefields of Europe and
the Middle East, it is doing so with one eye on the Indo-Pacific, where China’s
modernized military is undermining regional security. In the mounting U.S.-Chinese
rivalry, the Pentagon’s approach will rely on another form of deterrence, which
the 2022 U.S. National Defense Strategy dubbed “deterrence by resilience”—that
is, “the ability to withstand, fight through, and recover quickly from
disruption.” Resilience is the rationale behind the ongoing dispersal of U.S.
military bases in the Indo-Pacific, which will allow American forces to absorb
an attack and continue fighting. This effort has involved gaining access to
four military bases in the Philippines; advancing new U.S. Marine and U.S. Army
capabilities in Japan; forging several major initiatives with Australia,
including increased submarine port visits and aircraft rotations, deep
cooperation in outer space, and substantial U.S. and Australian investment in
basing upgrades; and securing a defense cooperation agreement with Papua New
Guinea that will allow for U.S. assistance in upgrading the country’s military,
increasing its interoperability with the U.S. military, and performing more
joint exercises. Meanwhile, over the last year and a half, a U.S. submarine
with the ability to fire a nuclear-armed ballistic missile made a port call to
South Korea, and an American B-52 bomber capable of deploying a nuclear weapon
landed there.
The presence of
increasingly capable U.S. military assets dispersed across the region
(alongside those of allied and partner militaries) complicates Chinese
planning. To some extent, this approach turns Thomas Schelling’s deterrence
theory upside down. Schelling stressed the utility of certainty in signaling.
What Washington is doing with its military in the Indo-Pacific, by contrast,
creates several potential pathways to preclude Chinese efforts to overturn the
status quo, increases the complexity of those contingencies, and induces
uncertainty about which may be the most relevant. It will indeed be difficult
to know whether any particular U.S. partner will prove willing to use or allow
the use of military assets from its territory in a conflict. But that
uncertainty is a feature, not a bug. Simply put, although the United States may
not have full clarity about what role specific allies and partners will play
should a conflict erupt, neither does China.
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