Maj. Gen. H.R. McMaster on the future of ground warfare: First, we need to unlearn some bad lessons from the last decade

By April
Labaro
Best
Defense guest columnist
(March 20, 2013)
What's new in warfare? Not much, according to Major General H.R. McMaster, commanding general of the
U.S. Army Maneuver Center of Excellence.
Rather, McMaster said in a talk the other day (March 20) at the Center for Strategic and
International Studies, we've actually had to re-learn some basic concepts. The
most important one being that despite technological advances, there are
continuities in modern warfare that shouldn't be overlooked. This is where he
got all Clausewitzian on us, arguing that the continuities are that war is an
extension of politics, has a human dimension, is always uncertain and,
ultimately, is a contest of wills. Ensuring that these lessons don't have to be
re-learned in the future may be more important than the outcomes of the wars
themselves, he said.
There are also a few lessons that we shouldn't have learned, the
first "wrong lesson" being that the raiding approach leads to a fast, easy and
cheap win. It didn't work in Iraq or Afghanistan and is not likely to work in
the future, he asserted.
The second bad lesson is that wars can be outsourced to proxy
forces. What can be accomplished via proxy forces is often exaggerated, he
warned, in part because collaboration does not necessarily mean congruent
interests.
And what projections can be made about the future of ground
maneuver warfare? There's a lot of uncertainty, but McMaster said he doesn't
buy the arguments made lately by schools of thought that believe that the
future will be more secure and our ground forces will not face many strategic
surprises. Institutionalizing the lessons learned (and unlearning the "wrong"
ones) is a critical first step towards making more accurate projections and
improving the effectiveness of our ground forces,
especially in the face of fiscal austerity and the growing range of
unconventional threats.
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