The Future of the Army
Military institutions could be on the front lines
in a very different kind of battle
by Donella Meadows
One of the articles in Is Militarism Fading? (IC#20) Winter 1989, Page 38
Copyright (c)1989, 1997 by Context Institute
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The borders between differing groups do not always fall on national
frontiers.
Donella (Dana) Meadows, author of the classic Limits to Growth and
a weekly newspaper column called "The Global Citizen," ventured
over one of these borders to meet a group of military planners charting
the future for the U.S. Army. The result of this novel collaboration was
a vision of a more constructive role for the military in the coming
decades.
To get The Global Citizen into your local newspaper, write your
paper's
editor or directly to Dana at P.O. Box 58, Plainfield, NH 03781.
When I was invited to a weekend workshop to help the U.S. Army think
through
its 30-year plan, I almost didn't go. I live a peaceful, academic
existence,
and I had built up a set of prejudices about the Army of the sort that come
from knowing absolutely nothing about it. I avoid things military. I am
repelled by violence and by indoctrinating young people to a state of
mindless
obedience. If I had any idea about the Army of 30 years from now, it was
that there shouldn't be one.
I went to the workshop anyway.
I went because I was impressed that any organization, anywhere, was
seriously
trying to see 30 years into the future. And a number of colleagues I
respect
were going, so I knew I'd learn something. (It didn't occur to me that I
might learn something from the Army.) Mainly, I think, I went to be present
at one of those rare moments when people from different worlds confront
one another for positive purposes. At those times, something interesting
always happens.
We outnumbered them, 12 academics to four Army officers. It was obvious
the first time we looked each other in the eye that the soldiers were as
nervous about the encounter as we were.
We had to start out with some translating. The colonel who briefed us
on the current state of the Army was stopped every five minutes to explain
terms. We could figure out who the "Sovs" were (rhymes with
"stoves")
but were unaware that we had been living all our lives in CONUS (the
continental
United States). TRADOC is the Training and Doctrine Command, the unit
assigned
to carry out this planning exercise, which has the code name Century 21.
Airland Battle is the current planning doctrine of the Army. (The Army is
the only organization I know other than the church that uses the word
"doctrine"
without embarrassment.)
Though the officers weren't in uniform, you would have had no trouble
distinguishing them from the intellectuals. The difference wasn't only in
their crisp haircuts, straight backs and good grooming (we academics run
to the slouchy and the sloppy). It was in their attention control. Army
officers know how to sit through briefings. They must have looked across
the table at our doodling, nodding ranks and wondered if any of us could
survive basic training. I looked back and wished that I could see such
disciplined,
alert faces in the classrooms of Dartmouth College.
I began to see the Army as a formidable educational institution. The
education is not only in concepts and skills, it is in confidence and
discipline.
Those soldiers were personally "together" in a way few civilians
are.
Army education is not, however, rich in information about the
complexities
of the world. These officers assigned a 30-year planning task, had done
the best they could by reading the futures literature, but they were full
of questions. How many 18- to 24-year-old males will there be in the year
2018? What new weapons will be on the battlefields? What will the Sovs be
up to?
We didn't answer their questions; we rejected the assumptions behind
them. Why should armies be made up of 18- to 24-year-old males? Battles
may not depend on weapons; there may not even be battles, or battlefields.
Conflicts may be nuclear, or they may be societal breakdowns as in Lebanon,
or countrywide rebellions as in Vietnam. The whole population may be
combatants.
Winning may be defined in terms of simple civil order or changing of hearts
and minds, not domination of territory.
As for the Sovs, by 2018 they may be on our side. There may be four or
five superpowers. The centers of conflict may not be Europe or the Middle
East. Keep your eye on Africa, we said, where populations are soaring. Keep
your eye on the drug empires of Latin America, which already have their
own armies, passports and airstrips and act like sovereign nations.
These ideas caused uneasy stirrings - we were painting a picture of a
future world far messier than a straight-line extrapolation from the
present.
The officers got especially nervous when we started thinking about new
roles
for the Army in this future world.
Suppose national security depends less on defending the Persian Gulf
oil than on developing new energy technologies at home. Suppose the cure
for unrest in the Third World is not riot control but nation-building.
Suppose
we work together with the Sovs to solve the environmental problems that
threaten us all. Suppose the Army's mission were defined not as fighting
battles, but as helping to create real security, both abroad and right here
in good old CONUS.
Suppose the future is not something to be predicted but something to
be created, and the Army has a role in that creation.
Mind blowing. The TRADOC officers' minds were blown and so was mine.
I began to see the armed forces not as a last resort for times of
breakdown,
but as a resource for intervening in the causes of breakdown, for healing
the poverty and the environmental destruction and mismanagement and
misunderstanding
that have always made armies an unfortunate and expensive necessity.
The Army is already more than a battle-fighting outfit, or a bottomless
sink for $800 screwdrivers. It is an organization of people with unusual
unity, discipline and energy. It has a research capacity, a training
capacity,
a capacity for getting things done. We could be a lot more imaginative in
giving it a mission that is big enough, worthy enough, for its
capacities.
Sun-Tzu
It does not take much strength
to lift a hair,
it does not take sharp eyes
to see the sun and moon,
it does not take sharp ears
to hear a thunderclap.
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