Restraint: A post-COVID-19 U.S. national security strategy
The response to the COVID-19 pandemic has weakened the U.S. economy, the foundation of its national power. This has implications for U.S. foreign policy.
Health and economic fallout from COVID-19 makes setting realistic defense priorities more urgent
The response to the coronavirus global pandemic has severely weakened the U.S. economy, the foundation of national power. This reality has vast implications for U.S. foreign policy.
Two economic factors suggest narrowing U.S. foreign policy objectives: (1) U.S. GDP and tax revenue will shrink in 2020, with no certainty about when they might recover. (2) Record deficits and debt endanger future economic growth.
Political reasons for foreign policy restraint augment those economic factors: The public increasingly perceives non-security risks are paramount, and priority will go to domestic spending that aids recovery and increases domestic institutional resilience.
Federal discretionary spending will bear a greater burden because mandatory spending programs are politically harder to cut. Since defense accounts for nearly half of discretionary spending, DoD will likely face sustained cuts.
The U.S. enjoys a favorable geostrategic position with abundant protection from rivals, so it can cut defense spending without compromising security. Indeed, ending peripheral commitments in favor of core security interests strengthens the U.S.
Ending policies bringing failure, overstretch, and drained coffers always made sense—coronavirus makes the case more urgent.
U.S. federal budget authority by category (FY 2019)
[caption id="" align="alignnone" width="2284"] Declining GDP and tax revenue and increased domestic spending post-COVID-19 will put downward pressure on DoD budgets.[/caption]
Abandon peripheral missions abroad and focus on core U.S. security and prosperity
As the pandemic demonstrates, non-military threats can be far more detrimental to Americans’ well-being than the non-state actors, rogue states, and authoritarian regimes that dominate military planning and drive DoD spending.
The decades-long pursuit of overly ambitious foreign policy goals disconnected from U.S. security contributed to the neglect of U.S. domestic institutions exposed by the coronavirus pandemic.
Recovering requires investment at home: education, health care, infrastructure, research and development, and policies that promote innovation and job creation.
For the past 20 years, the U.S. spent roughly $1 trillion annually on defense-related objectives (DoD, veteran’s care, homeland security, nuclear weapons, diplomacy) while domestic infrastructure in critical industries went under-resourced.
Rebalancing defense priorities to focus more on economic prosperity and public health will enhance U.S. power in the long term.
Middle East: Reduce overinvestment and military presence, which has backfired and weakened the U.S.
Core Middle East interests are (1) preventing significant disruptions to global oil supply and (2) defending against anti-U.S. terror threats. The former requires minimal U.S. effort; the latter requires intelligence, cooperation, and limited strikes, not occupations.
The Middle East accounts for just 4 percent of global GDP, yet for decades, the U.S. has attempted to reshape the region through military force, disrupting the regional balance of power, exacerbating political instability, and allowing terrorist groups to flourish.
Today, the U.S. has 62,000 troops in the region, many of them vulnerable to attacks by local militias. The U.S. is also fighting wars in Iraq, Syria, and Yemen, largely based on exaggerated fears of Iran, a middling power contained by its local rivals.
The U.S. will be able to fund part of its coronavirus recovery by ending its participation in conflicts in the Middle East and nearby areas, such as Afghanistan and Somalia. This would free up tens of billions of dollars annually for higher priorities.
Additional savings can be had by focusing the Pentagon on its core warfighting missions and right-sizing force structure—reducing ground forces in particular, which have been swollen by these commitments.
The U.S., Europe, and Asia account for 81 percent of global GDP
[caption id="" align="alignnone" width="2280"] The U.S., Europe, and East Asia are the hubs of the global economy, making them more important to U.S. security and prosperity than the Middle East.[/caption]
Europe: Shift security burdens to wealthy allies
The U.S. has strong economic and diplomatic interests in Europe, but the continent faces limited direct military threats. Despite the fall of the USSR, the U.S. maintains a heavy military footprint in Europe in the name of securing wealthy, relatively safe allies.
This arrangement served U.S. interests when a big U.S. military presence in Europe balanced the USSR’s military might while enabling allies to recover economically and unify.
As allies grew rich and the USSR collapsed, a sensible balancing policy became a subsidy that let wealthy allies “cheap ride” on U.S. taxpayers, driving excess DoD spending while subsidizing lavish social welfare programs for European nations.
Russia is a declining power (with a large nuclear arsenal). The EU dominates Russia in important metrics of national power: 3½:1 population, 11:1 GDP, and 5:1 military spending. European economies are also more dynamic than Russia’s.
Instead of jawboning allies for shirking their obligations, U.S. policy should shift the security burden onto them by (1) ending the European Defense Initiative and (2) implementing a responsible draw down of U.S. ground and nuclear forces on the continent.
This would not only free up finite U.S. resources for higher priorities at home or in Asia, but also encourage European allies to revitalize their militaries: increasing spending, prioritizing modernization, or increasing military cooperation with each other.
Asia: Fortify Asian allies with A2/AD capabilities to deter Chinese aggression at less risk
U.S. policy toward China—the only conceivable strategic competitor—balances several key interests: deterring Chinese territorial expansion against Asian allies, avoiding war, and ensuring a fair and beneficial trading relationship.
Efforts to balance against China should therefore be based on core U.S. interests and carefully designed and planned to reduce cost, minimize escalation risks, and protect trade.
U.S. goals in Asia are inherently defensive (to preserve the territorial status quo) and are best served by a military approach of “defensive defense”: an operational concept that limits U.S. costs by encouraging allies to develop their defensive capabilities.
By improving anti-access/area denial (A2/AD) capabilities—a network of sensors and missiles—U.S. allies can deter Chinese attacks more effectively and cheaply than via investment in aircraft and surface ships that mimic U.S. capabilities.
Allied defensive capability is less threatening to China than U.S. offensive capability. Reducing the perceived threat of direct attacks, A2/AD is less prone to spark costly, counterproductive arms racing.
Pressing allies to adopt this approach will allow the U.S. to jettison escalatory plans to defend them by attacking the Chinese mainland, lowering tensions and risks of a broader war with China and allowing for cost saving on U.S. forces in Asia.
U.S. force structure: Constrained DoD budgets means more tradeoffs and rebalancing among the services
With the world’s most sophisticated nuclear arsenal, large oceans separating it from rivals, and weak neighbors, the U.S. has a unique advantage over every other nation—security is abundant and cheap.
The U.S. accounts for 40 percent of global military spending—treaty allies account for 22 percent; Russia and China account for 17 percent. The 2020 DoD budget ($757 billion) exceeds Cold War highs in real terms, reflecting a false sense of insecurity.
Reduced DoD budgets can force debate and prioritization among programs and services—between what contributes to U.S. security and what is peripheral or even counterproductive—that large spending authorizations prevent.
Geography makes the U.S. a natural naval power and trading nation. Distance from other major states means the U.S. is perceived as less threatening—unlike China, which borders other Eurasia powers.
The Navy is the key service for projecting U.S. power globally and defending commerce if necessary while avoiding costly occupations. The Navy should command a larger portion of DoD’s reduced budget.
With no nation building and a large reservist pool, the U.S. can reduce Army, Marines, and special operations forces end strength.
Mission-driven reductions to force structure generate savings on personnel and procurement, enabling savings on operational costs, administrative overhead, basing, and other support functions.
U.S. military spending compared to allies and competitors
[caption id="" align="alignnone" width="2284"] Total U.S. military spending vs. the rest of the world[/caption]
No major or regional powers are unscathed by the pandemic—strategic thinking will determine who comes out stronger
The pandemic has hit all major powers hard, including U.S. adversaries; the economic pain is well distributed.
China announced its GDP contracted at 6.8 percent in the first quarter of 2020, the first decline since 1976. The CCP relies on steady economic growth for legitimacy, and in a nation with almost no social safety net, job losses could breed discontent.
While earning some goodwill, China’s efforts to help afflicted nations are an attempt to mitigate the reputational damage from its early obfuscation of the outbreak, which led to the global pandemic. Businesses are also taking steps to limit their China exposure.
Record low oil prices could see Russia’s GDP fall by as much as 15 percent this year, resulting in more pressure to limit its military spending and interventions in places such as Ukraine and Syria.
Iran has been crippled by the virus. Infection has killed several of its senior leaders, and the collapse in oil prices has damaged its already shrinking economy, making this middling power even weaker.
Strong fundamentals undergird U.S. power: favorable geography; a technologically advanced society with a skilled, innovative workforce; and abundant natural resources. Post-COVID rebuilding will require focusing on these strengths to restart the economy.
The U.S. grew to become the global superpower by virtue of its productive economy; advanced technology, including nuclear weapons; and skillful diplomacy.
The pursuit of liberal hegemony—militarized democracy spreading fueled by threat exaggeration and hubris—has resulted in strategic failure, military overstretch, and a hollowing out of U.S. internal strength.
The coronavirus pandemic has exposed the extent to which U.S. power has been squandered. To recover its strength, U.S. should focus on the core elements of national power while avoiding excessive military projects and the overspending that entails.
The budgetary demands to recover from this pandemic will be enormous, but the fundamental sources of U.S. security are robust—and insensitive to mild deviations in military activities and spending.
Coronavirus is a terrible tragedy but nonetheless an opportunity to shed illusions and rebuild the real pillars of national strength for the long haul.
As long as U.S. focuses on its prosperity—rather than peripheral distractions—it will grow stronger at home and retain the ability to marshal the resources necessary for competition with any adversary.
This article has been republished with permission from Defense Priorities.
Benjamin H. Friedman is Policy Director at Defense Priorities and an adjunct lecturer at George Washington University’s Elliott School of International Affairs. Previously, he served as Research Fellow in Defense and Homeland Security Studies at the Cato Institute.
Top photo credit: One of approximately 100 Panamanian demonstrators in favor of the Vatican handing over General Noriega to the US, waves a Panamanian and US flag. December 28, 1989 REUTERS/Zoraida Diaz
On Dec. 20, 1989, the U.S. military launched “Operation Just Cause” in Panama. The target: dictator, drug trafficker, and former CIA informant Manuel Noriega.
Citing the protection of U.S. citizens living in Panama, the lack of democracy, and illegal drug flows, the George H.W. Bush administration said Noriega must go. Within days of the invasion, he was captured, bound up and sent back to the United States to face racketeering and drug trafficking charges. U.S. forces fought on in Panama for several weeks before mopping up the operation and handing the keys back to a new president, Noriega opposition leader Guillermo Endar, who international observers said had won the 1989 election that Noriega later annulled. He was sworn in with the help of U.S. forces hours after the invasion.
As they say in school, “easy-peasy.” Could an operation to take out a modern narco kingpin and dictator in Venezuela, Nicolas Maduro, be much different?
“What I would say to you is that a Venezuela invasion does not look like Panama, it looks more like Iraq (in 2003). Venezuela is a larger, and more complicated operation than Panama,” said one retired military officer who spoke to Responsible Statecraft. He served in both the 1989 invasion and in the war in Iraq 15 years later, before spending the rest of his career in government.
“There are a lot of very specific circumstances that were in place in Panama, that we don't have in most other places,” he noted, starting with the fact that there was a U.S. embassy, garrisoned troops as part of the U.S. Southern Command (upwards of 14,000 stationed there before Operation Just Cause; 26,000 total for the invasion) and a rich intelligence network built up over the decades when Americans were running the Panama Canal zone. Most importantly, Noriega, he said, was unpopular inside and outside of the country and much more vulnerable.
“The Panamanian Defense Forces (PDF) was already fragmented and divided before the invasion. I mean, people forget that there had been a coup attempt against Noriega in October, just two months before Operation Just Cause,” points out Orlando Perez, professor of political science at the University of North Texas at Dallas and author of “Political Culture in Panama: Democracy after Invasion.”
“Also, the PDF, their deployment was centralized. It was all headquartered in Panama City, that's where most of the forces were. And so once you captured the comandancia, the headquarters, which was in Panama City, the whole thing collapsed.”
A U.S. Army M113 armored personnel carrier guards a street near the destroyed Panamanian Defense Force headquarters building during the second day of Operation Just Cause, Dec. 20 ,1989. (Dod photo)
There is no U.S. embassy in Venezuela; relations have been cut off since 2019. Moreover, said the retired military officer, after a high-profile coup attempt against then-President Hugo Chavez in 2002, Maduro’s government is more coup-proof than ever, and looks more like Saddam Hussein’s Ba’ath Party in Iraq, which means it is integrated into the society in ways that ensures a lot more loyalty than Noriega, who as a military chief did not rule directly but rather through puppet presidents, from 1983 until his capture.
“This (Maduro) regime has had a long time to embed itself, and it's built sort of this political and party apparatus extending across every element of society, in every school, in every company, every office. And Noriega didn't have that. He had a much more sclerotic kind of political structure around him, mainly because he's more of a gangster,” he said.
“Look, Noriega decapitated a lot of his own leadership with purges to try and make sure that they were as loyal to him. Now they weren't going to fight for him. I mean, you know, we hit him hard, and they kind of melted away. They did fight. I mean, in all honesty, they did…but once they saw the writing on the wall they made different choices.”
General Manuel Noriega is escorted onto American military aircraft by DEA agents shortly after his surrender and arrest in Panama, Jan, 3, 1989. (Public domain/Combined Military Service Digital Photographic Files)
The United States military has been building up hard naval and air assets and amassing troops on its nearby military installation in Puerto Rico and off the coast of Venezuela for the last month. According to reports, it could have some 16,000 personnel in the region with the arrival of the USS Gerald Ford carrier strike group.
That is hardly enough for a “Just Cause” invasion of Venezuela, note the experts who spoke with Responsible Statecraft.
“The analogy, it breaks down in many different ways. Venezuela is about 12 times larger than Panama. Panama had perhaps 2.4 million people (in 1989). That's about the population of Caracas alone. The Venezuela urban landscape is much denser and more complex than Panama City,” said Perez.
Moreover, despite very real suspected vulnerabilities on the part of Maduro, that his support is soft, that he has built it through a regime of political favors and corruption, Perez said that he thinks “there is enough of an organized resistance that (U.S.) military planners need to think about, at least consider and not dismiss.”
“So the argument is, it's brittle there, you know, they've been bought off, and they will collapse immediately. That when the Marines show up on shore, these people will collapse and there will not be a resistance. Well, you know, we don't know that. Their livelihoods, their lives, will be at stake, many of them, you know, might end up in jail or executed,” so there are plenty of incentives for them to resist, he added.
Aside from the geographic differences between the two countries (experts said it would take at least 100,000 U.S. forces or more to properly invade the country, depose Maduro, and then try to restore order), there is the matter of intelligence. The U.S. had a large military footprint in Panama since the opening of the canal in 1914 and 1999, when a treaty brokered by President Jimmy Carter to hand the canal back to the Panamanians, took effect. Through paid operatives like Noriega, the CIA had used the country as a base for Cold War-era covert ops throughout Latin America. Beyond that, the American military itself had been living, working, and laying down a semblance of roots in Panama that allowed for a level of operational awareness that just cannot be replicated in Maduro’s Venezuela.
“We had thousands of troops down there who were married to Panamanian women. They had their in-laws spread across the country. All of them hated Noriega. We had people coming in to work in the base who hated Noriega and would tell us all kinds of things,” said the retired officer. “They’d grab me because I was a Spanish-speaking officer, and they're like, let me tell you this, this, this, and this. I got guys who would tell me where the checkpoints were every day as they were coming in.”
“Here's a great story,” he added. “We got a report of Noriega militias massing in a neighborhood in Panama City, and my roommate called his girlfriend who lived there and she said it wasn't true, that's what we could do.”
The experts cautioned that the most important take-away from Panama is not that the invasion and capture of Noriega was “easy” but that, despite establishing a working democracy, it did not necessarily make life in Panama any easier. It did not stop the crime and illicit drug flows into the U.S. and, if anything, it gave Washington a false sense of how it could pursue intervention and regime change in the future. The prime example is the much larger First Gulf War of 1991, just two years later. H.W. Bush declined to depose Iraq’s Saddam Hussein at the time, but his son was convinced to follow through in 2003, resulting in one of the biggest U.S. foreign policy debacles in modern history.
“It taught us the wrong lessons, yes,” the retired U.S. military officer said. “There is this idea that this works here, therefore it’ll work there. But I think that what the policy community does is it incorporates a Cliff Notes version of history, it takes a complex situation, settles on a narrative, and then incorporates this very Cliff Notes half-assed version of what happened, and that becomes the lesson learned.”
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Top image credit: U.S. President Donald Trump, Vice President JD Vance, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, and Senator Jim Risch (R-ID) attend a dinner with the leaders of the C5+1Central Asian countries of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan, in the East Room of the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., November 6, 2025. REUTERS/Nathan Howard
The November 6 summit between President Donald Trump and the leaders of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan in Washington, D.C. represents a significant moment in U.S.-Central Asia relations (C5+1). It was the first time a U.S. president hosted the C5+1 group in the White House, marking a turning point for U.S. relations with Central Asia.
The summit signaled a clear shift toward economic engagement. Uzbekistan pledged $35 billion in U.S. investments over three years (potentially $100 billion over a decade) and Kazakhstan signed $17 billion in bilateral agreements and agreed to cooperate with the U.S. on critical minerals. Most controversially, Kazakhstan became the first country in Trump's second term to join the Abraham Accords.
However, behind the big numbers and fanfare of handshakes lies a critical question: is this a real partnership, or just another round of great power competition dressed up in new clothes?
The critical minerals trap
Critical minerals were at the center of the summit. Trump called Central Asia “an extremely wealthy region” and made it clear that “one of the key items on our agenda is critical minerals.”
Before the main meeting with Trump, Secretary of State Marco Rubio told the Central Asian foreign ministers in Washington, “You are looking to take the resources... that God has blessed your nations with, and turn them into responsible development that allow you to diversify your economies.”
There’s nothing wrong with building economic partnerships around natural resources. Done right, cooperation can be mutually beneficial. Central Asia holds at least 25 of the 54 minerals identified by the U.S. government as “critical.” The Trump administration wants access to those minerals to diversify supply chains and reduce reliance on China.
But when U.S. mediaframes U.S. engagement with Central Asia as a way to “counter China and Russia” or win a “resources race,” it sends the wrong message. This framing contradicts Central Asian preferences and reinforces zero-sum thinking, turning countries into prizes, not partners. It keeps old habits alive, treating relationships as transactional, not as something lasting or meaningful.
Respecting strategic autonomy
Central Asian leaders have made it clear they don’t want to get dragged into another “great game.” They’re finding their own ways to solve problems. Take for example the recent Kyrgyzstan-Tajikistan border conflict. The two countries resolved the century-long dispute on their own. In March 2025, the respective presidents signed a historic treaty to end the violence, which had killed dozens and displaced thousands.
The 2022 Treaty on Allied Relations between Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan is another good sign. The region is moving past old border disputes and focusing on cooperation, trade, and new regional projects. These developments demonstrate the region’s growing autonomy and that Central Asia isn’t just waiting around for the next big power to swoop in.
As political analyst Alexandra Sitenko wrote in RS earlier this year, the Trump administration “would be well advised to take advantage of the increased interaction among Central Asian states, as well as within their widespread network of strategic partnerships and alliances, that includes Russia, China, Turkey and the Arab world.”
This fits well with Trump’s 2019-2025 U.S. Strategy for Central Asia that sets the goal of “building a more stable and prosperous Central Asia that is free to pursue political, economic, and security interests with a variety of partners on its own terms.”
It’s important not to slip back into a military-first approach. For years, U.S. involvement in the region was dominated by military basing tied to the Afghanistan War. Now that the war is over, the U.S. doesn’t need bases there, and the current approach stands in sharp contrast to the 2001-2021 period, when the U.S. ran operations in Afghanistan out of Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan.
Still, the U.S. conducts military exercises with Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan. As QI’s George Beebe and Alex Little wrote in Responsible Statecraft, “These military activities in a region with a robust Russian security presence are dangerous and unnecessary.” The U.S. should steer clear of new bases and rethink security assistance that could create dependencies.
President Joe Biden’s decision to withdraw U.S. troops from Afghanistan in 2021, while controversial, was a sound decision that freed the U.S. from costly entanglements and let countries handle their own security challenges. Since then, the Central Asian states have started dealing directly with the Taliban on border issues, economic relations, and humanitarian needs.
The Abraham Accords diversion
Kazakhstan’s announcement that it would join the Abraham Accords introduces a problematic element into an otherwise productive summit. Kazakhstan called the decision “a natural and logical continuation of Kazakhstan's foreign policy course – grounded in dialogue, mutual respect, and regional stability.”
The move is largely seen as symbolic. Kazakhstan and Israel have already had diplomatic ties since 1992. So, the announcement looks less about real progress and more about handing Trump a foreign policy headline.
Israel cheered Kazakhstan’s announcement. Palestinian officials, not surprisingly, slammed it. The Abraham Accords have been criticized for bypassing rather than advancing Israeli-Palestinian peace in that Israel gets recognition, but there’s no pressure to change its approach to occupation, settlements, or Palestinian rights.
Moreover, the Abraham Accords serve to deepen U.S. entanglement in Middle Eastern conflicts rather than support the kind of prudent disengagement that some experts recommend. Now, with Kazakhstan on board, the Trump administration is tying economic partnerships in Central Asia to U.S. policy in the Middle East. This risks pulling these countries into tensions that serve neither their interests nor broader regional stability.
A new US approach
The C5+1 framework has the potential to genuinely advance U.S. and Central Asian interests. For Washington, engagement with Central Asia should recognize that the region is not a core U.S. security interest. There’s no reason to pour in huge military or economic resources.
This does not mean disengagement, but rather proportionate engagement through diplomacy and economic partnerships (the kind we saw this week in Washington), and, most of all, respect for the independence and choices of Central Asian countries. Right now, there’s a risk of getting carried away just to counter China or Russia. That kind of enthusiasm leads to overreach.
Broader U.S.-Central Asia engagement should respect multi-alignment. This means acknowledging that Central Asia’s relationships with Russia, China, and other powers serve national interests and do not require U.S. countermeasures. A pragmatic foreign policy approach would recognize that Central Asia’s economic engagement with China through the Belt and Road Initiative, or continued energy and labor migration ties with Russia, do not inherently threaten U.S. interests.
Central Asia's emergence as a more cohesive, autonomous region represents a success story. These countries have peacefully resolved long-standing border disputes, increased regional cooperation, and demonstrated pragmatic diplomacy in managing relationships with multiple great powers.
All this gives the U.S. a chance to engage on a healthier footing, through diplomacy and real partnerships. Washington can advance its interests without the overextension, militarization, and zero-sum thinking that have caused problems in the past.
The Bunker appears originally at the Project on Government Oversight and is republished here with permission.
Trump says it’s time to resume nuclear tests
The happiest day The Bunker ever spent inside the Pentagon was September 27, 1991. That’s the Friday the first President Bush unilaterally declared, with help(PDF) from his just-departed defense secretary, Dick Cheney, that he would eliminate most short-range nuclear weapons. They also took Air Force atomic bombers off their 24-hour runway alerts. The dying Soviet Union would do the same shortly thereafter. The Bunker will never forget walking on air down those Pentagon corridors nearly 35 years ago, elated that the superpowers were finally backing away from the nuclear abyss.
The saddest day, assuming he were still on the beat, would have to have been October 29. That’s when President Trump declared that “because of other countries testing programs, I have instructed the Department of War to start testing our Nuclear Weapons on an equal basis.” The U.S. hasn’t tested a nuclear weapon since September 23, 1992. Of course, if The Bunker were still on the beat, he couldn’t be walking down Pentagon corridors — on air, or anywhere else. That’s because he would have refused to sign the diktat(PDF) imposed by Defense Secretary Pete “Hands-Off” Hegseth. The current defense chief disdains any reporting on the U.S. military that he doesn’t dictate and has barred reporters who disagree from the Pentagon.
Of course, taking Trump’s Truth Social post at face value is always a risky proposition, especially when it’s filled with errors (no possessive apostrophe after “countries,” for example, for the punctuationistas among us). Not only is there no Department of War — no matter how many times he refers to the Department of Defense that way — the Pentagon doesn’t test nuclear weapons. That job belongs to the Department of Energy, which recently furloughed 1,400 of the 1,800 workers responsible for that mission due to the government shutdown. And there are no “countries” testing atomic warheads these days except for North Korea. Trump repeated his insistence that U.S. nuclear-weapons testing will resume in a November 2 interview on “60 Minutes.” For good measure, he added that both China and Pakistan are secretly conducting such tests, claims that Beijing and Islamabad quickly denied. Incredibly, he’s clashing with Chris Wright, his energy secretary, over the issue.
Such messy nuclear messaging is an unforced error in an increasingly edgy world. Global nuclear arsenals and atomic-weapons tests are polarizing issues, for obvious reasons. Supporters embrace testing because it proves the continuing potency of such weapons, and the deterrence they supposedly provide. Those opposed to it believe it simply is another step closer to nuclear war. Given that split, it’s fitting that the final nuclear-weapons test carried out by the U.S. 33 years ago was code-named “Divider.”
The “fog of war” is a metaphor that stands for the sheer confusion that envelopes combatants on an ever-changing battlefield. It’s not supposed to be coming from the commander-in-chief, who has plenty of time to double-check what he’s saying. Nuclear weapons remain a threat to civilization. Whenever a U.S. president talks about them, he or she should do so with calmness, clarity, and coherence.
These days, anyone can say anything
If you live in the nation’s capital, you might awaken each morning to WTOP, Washington’s all-news radio station. Beyond traffic and weather, its airwaves are filled with ads for government contractors eager to peddle their wares to the Defense Department and other federal agencies. Recently, there’s been a series of spots from Lockheed, the Pentagon’s biggest contractor, ending with the line: “Ahead of ready.”
Ahead of ready?
This is the company building the F-35 fighter for the Air Force, the Marines, and the Navy. Here’s what objective observers have been saying about the readiness of Lockheed’s pre-eminent program:
“The Lockheed Martin-made F-35A — the cornerstone of the service’s fighter fleet and one of the most expensive military programs in history — has been plagued with reliability and availability issues. In 2021, the fighter was available nearly 69% of the time, according to the Air Force. But the F-35A’s mission capable rates have since plunged, and the jet was ready 51.5% of the time in 2024. The Joint Strike Fighter’s lagging availability has become such a problem that its program executive officer, Lt. Gen. Michael Schmidt, in 2023 announced a ‘war on readiness’ that seeks to improve how often the F-35 can fly,” Defense Newsreported in March.
“The F-35 program has failed to meet a key readiness metric for six straight years, despite a steady increase in spending to operate and maintain the aircraft, according to a new report from a government watchdog agency,” Defense Onereported in 2024.
“The F-35 fleet mission capable rate — the percentage of time the aircraft can perform one of its tasked missions — was about 55% in March 2023, far below program goals,” the Government Accountability Office reported in 2023.
Where’s the Federal Trade Commission when you need it, at least when it comes to the F-35? The agency’s truth-in-advertising mission is “to stop scams; prevent fraudsters from perpetrating scams in the future; freeze their assets; and get compensation for victims.”
Sounds about right.
Mission Impossible (cont.)
Well, it’s been nearly six months since President Trump announced his plan to build a “Golden Dome” shield to protect the nation from all incoming aerial threats — and to do it for $175 billion before his term ends in 2029. Well, the clock’s a-tickin’, and the folks charged with building the thing still don’t know what it is they’re supposed to be making.
“Golden Dome hype meets information vacuum as industry awaits Pentagon direction,” read the October 30 headline over Sandra Erwin’s story in Space News. “The holistic architecture” — its basic blueprint — hasn’t been shared with anyone in industry at this point,” Tom Barton, co-founder of Antaris, a Pentagon missile-defense contractor, told an industry confab. Rob Mitrevski, president of defense contractor L3Harris’ Golden Dome Strategy and Integration (yep, that’s his title) added that “the question still remains, what is Golden Dome?” Well, it’s basically a pie-in-the-sky fantasy designed to make defense hawks feel warm and comfy while impoverishing taxpayers with a false sense of security.
The biggest challenge when it comes to outfitting the nation’s armed forces is to get the biggest bang for the buck. A national missile-defense system won’t make sense until it’s good enough to work and cheap enough to buy. Right now, neither of those is true. And, based on all available evidence, it’s going to stay that way for light-years into the future.
So that’s the paradox this week in Pentagon procurement. With or without testing, you know nuclear weapons are going to work, most of the time. And you know that Trump’s shield of dreams won’t. Both are pitiful wastes of money from a world apparently unable to grapple with the challenge of life on this planet.
The value of lasers on the battlefield has been hyped for decades, and they are not the “strategic game-changers” their boosters claim, Jules J. S. Gaspard argues in the fall issue of Military Strategy Magazine.
The West “is losing the information war” to China, Iran, and Russia, and their “global web of news sites, podcasters, media platforms, and influencers,” Artur Kalandarov wrote October 31 on West Point’s Modern War Institute’s website.
Senior civilian members of the Trump administration have been moving into housing on military bases traditionally occupied by the nation’s top military officers, Michael Scherer, Missy Ryan, and Ashley Parker reported in The Atlantic October 30.
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