Rep. Neil Abercrombie (D-Hawaii) has little patience with being told by defense officials that various procurement issues will be worked out in the Quadrennial Defense Review. Asked for his assessment of the QDR’s value and its reliability in mapping defense spending, Abercrombie said Thursday, “I don’t think it’s valuable and I don’t think it’s reliable.” He called the QDR a “PR stunt” that is simply “all rhetorical flourishes.” In his view, too, the constant refrain from Defense Secretary Robert Gates and his top officials that it will yield new direction is “a stall.” Abercrombie, who chairs the air and land forces panel of the House Armed Services Committee, told defense reporters in Washington that he’s sympathetic to the fact that not everything has been figured out yet by the new Administration, but he asked rhetorically, “Why don’t they just say it?” He said Gates would “serve the Administration better by not putting off this stuff … trying to fool people into thinking that somehow this PR exercise is going to present some kind of definitive pathway to strategic proposals by the defense department.” He said the QDR actually hurts defense policy debates because it creates “expectations” that either don’t materialize or are ignored.
“Military history shows that the best defense is almost always a maneuvering offense supported by solid logistics. This was true for mechanized land warfare, air combat, and naval operations since World War II. It will also be true as the world veers closer to military conflict in space,” writes Aidan…