Demonizing Russia
Russia, Not ISIS, Greatest Threat to US, General
Says
By Marcus Weisgerber
July 15, 2015 "Information
Clearing House"
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"DefenseOne"
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Russia is a greater threat to the U.S. mainland than
the Islamic State militants who are capturing territory in Iraq and
Syria, said Air Force Gen. Paul Selva, President Obama’s nominee to
become America’s No. 2 military officer. This seemed to surprise
several of the senators gathered for Selva’s confirmation hearing on
Tuesday.
But Selva’s comments echoed ones by Marine Corps Gen. Joseph Dunford,
Obama’s nominee to become chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, at
his confirmation hearing last week. Together, they illustrate the
U.S. military’s rising concern about
Moscow since it invaded Ukraine last year.
“Russia possesses the conventional and nuclear
capability to be an existential threat to this nation should they
choose to do so,” Selva told the Senate Armed Services Committee.
When SASC Chairman Sen.
John McCain, R-Ariz., asked why he put Russia — and China, and Iran,
and North Korea — ahead of ISIS, Selva
said, “Because right now ISIS does not
present a clear and present threat to our homeland and to the
existence of our nation. It is a threat we must deal with and we
must help our regional partners deal with, but it does not threaten
us at home.”
Dunford and Selva appear to have caught lawmakers
off guard, even though the Pentagon has taken
a series of recent actions to counter the Russian military.
“I think it kind of caught a lot of us by surprise
… that that would be your direction,” Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.V. said.
Earlier this month, Gen. Martin Dempsey, the
current chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff,
unveiled a new National Military Strategy that warned of hybrid
wars — ones that mix governments and non-state actors, like Russia’s
pairing of traditional military units with eastern Ukraine
separatists. It also forecast more protracted wars, like the current
campaign against ISIS.
“I think our experience in Ukraine … highlights
the fact that we need to update our deterrence and response model to
deal with the threat that we have today, which has been described as
a hybrid threat from Russia, which combines political instruments,
unconventional warfare as well as support for separatists in these
countries,” Dunford said last week.
The
previous National Military Strategy, released in 2011, barely
mentioned Moscow. It stated, simply, that the Pentagon “will
increase dialogue and military-to-military relations with Russia,
building on our successful efforts in strategic arms reduction” and
“seek to cooperate with Russia on counter-terrorism,
counter-proliferation, space, and Ballistic Missile Defense.”
The same was true of the
2012 Defense Strategic Guidance, which focused on the pivot of
U.S. forces to the Asia-Pacific region.
Its only mention of Russia was this: “engagement with Russia remains
important, and we will continue to build a closer relationship in
areas of mutual interest and encourage it to be a contributor across
a broad range of issues.”
At his hearing, Selva pledged to communicate with
his Russian counterpart and possibly partner with Moscow’s military,
like mentioned in these Pentagon strategy documents.
“Although we disagree with Russia’s recent conduct
against its neighbors and will continue with our efforts to deter
future actions, I will leave open the possibility for collaboration
with Russia in areas of mutual national security interests,” he
wrote in his response to advance questions from the committee.