Caspar W. Weinberger,
Secretary of Defense under President Reagan, made
headlines around the world with his views concerning
when the US shouldand
should notuse military power. He spoke in the aftermath of the
Oct. 23, 1983, suicide truck bombing that killed 241
American servicemen, most
of them Marines, who were in Beirut, Lebanon, on an
ill-defined peacekeeping mission. Weinberger urged
caution in use of force and,
in this notable
speech, listed six tests that should govern sending
troops into combat.
The Washington Post immediately labeled this statement the Weinberger
Doctrine (later misidentified by many as the Powell Doctrine and
attributed to Secretary of State Colin Powell). Weinbergers view
is considered the intellectual counterweight to the so-called Limited
Objectives doctrine, which holds that the United States can and
should conduct limited military operations for limited
political goals. The issue flared in a different form in
the debate over the size of the force deployed to Iraq.
Once it is clear
our troops are required because our vital interests are
at stake, then we must have the firm national resolve to commit every
ounce of strength
necessary to win the fight to achieve our objectives.
... Just as clearly, there are other situations where United States combat
forces should
not be used.
I believe the postwar period has taught us several lessons,
and from them I have developed six major tests to be applied
when we are weighing the use of US combat forces abroad.
Let me now share them with
you.
First, the United States should not commit forces to combat
overseas unless the particular engagement or occasion is
deemed vital to our national interest or that of our allies.
That emphatically does
not mean that we should declare beforehand, as we did with
Korea in 1950, that a particular area is outside our strategic
perimeter.
Second, if we decide it is necessary to put combat troops
into a given situation, we should do so wholeheartedly,
and with the clear intention of winning. If we are unwilling
to commit the forces or resources
necessary to achieve our objectives, we should not commit
them at all. Of course if the particular situation requires
only limited force to win
our objectives, then we should not hesitate to commit forces
sized accordingly. When Hitler broke treaties and remilitarized
the Rhineland, small combat
forces then could perhaps have prevented the holocaust
of World War II.
Third, if we do decide to commit forces to combat overseas,
we should have clearly defined political and military objectives.
And we should know precisely how our forces can accomplish
those clearly defined
objectives. And we should have and send the forces needed
to do just that. As Clausewitz wrote, No one starts a waror
rather, no one in his senses ought to do sowithout first being clear
in his mind what he intends to achieve by that war and how he intends
to conduct it. War
may be different today than in Clausewitzs time, but the need for
well-defined objectives and a consistent strategy is still
essential. If we determine that a combat mission has become necessary
for our vital
national interests, then we must send forces capable to
do the joband
not assign a combat mission to a force configured for peacekeeping.
Fourth, the relationship between our objectives and the
forces we have committedtheir size, composition, and dispositionmust
be continually reassessed and adjusted if necessary. Conditions
and objectives invariably change during the course of a conflict. When
they do change,
then so must our combat requirements. We must continuously
keep as a beacon light before us the basic questions: Is this conflict
in our national interest? Does our national interest require
us to fight, to use force of arms? If the answers are yes, then
we must win. If the answers are no, then we should not be
in combat.
Fifth, before the US commits combat forces abroad, there
must be some reasonable assurance we will have the support
of the American people and their elected representatives
in Congress. This support cannot
be achieved unless we are candid in making clear the threats
we face; the support cannot be sustained without continuing
and close consultation.
We cannot fight a battle with the Congress at home while
asking our troops to win a war overseas or, as in the case
of Vietnam, in effect asking
our troops not to win but just to be there.
Finally, the commitment of US forces to combat should
be a last resort. ...
These tests I have just mentioned have been phrased negatively
for a purpose; they are intended to sound a note of cautioncaution
that we must observe prior to committing forces to combat
overseas. When we ask our military forces to risk their
very lives in such situations,
a note of caution is not only prudent, it is morally required.
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