Full Description
Force structures around which western militaries were built after the Cold War, with their emphasis on comparatively small numbers of exquisite systems, will not withstand sustained combat with a peer competitor. As a consequence, there has been a growing emphasis on the employment of second tier capabilities alongside existing platforms and systems in a high-low mix spurred by the effectiveness of systems such as converted COTS UAVs in Ukraine. Such capabilities are part of a broader set of capabilities the procurement of which might be described as dissimilar rearmament. While there is considerable promise to second tier systems, enthusiasm can sometimes lead observers to elide over their vulnerabilities and the challenges associated with their employment. These challenges extend from the relative absence of formal tactical and operational concepts for the combination of mass and exquisite capabilities to the current absence of an enterprise level understanding of what would be needed to deliver capabilities at scale in terms of organisational reform, human capital and industrial policy. This Whitehall Paper discusses how dissimilar rearmament might be leveraged as an organising principle connecting R&D, industry and the armed forces across the physical, conceptual and moral components of fighting power. In doing so, it offers a means to reinforce the defence of the Euro-Atlantic area and the tactical, operational and strategic choices which will need to be made in order to realise the promise of new technology.
Contents
Introduction: The Strategic Logic of Dissimilar Rearmament, Sidharth Kaushal and Paul O'Neill
The Potential of Dissimilar Rearmament
I. The Promise of the Smart, Cheap and Many, T X Hammes
Physics and Friction on the Modern Battlefield
II. Physical Trade-Offs and the Challenges of Massed Strike, Justin Bronk
III. Spectral Constraints of Drone Warfare, Jack Watling
Concepts of Operations to Leverage Dissimilar Rearmament
IV. Delivering Pervasive ISR: A 'Quick Win' for Dissimilar Rearmament Strategies, Juliana Suess and Noah Sylvia
V. Second-Tier Precision Strike as a Competitive Instrument, Sidharth Kaushal and Noah Sylvia
Dissimilar Rearmament as an Enterprise
VI. An Affordable People Component, Paul O'Neill
VII. A Contemporary Approach to Industrial Mobilisation, Paul O'Neill and Sidharth Kaushal
Conclusion: The Value of Scale, Sidharth Kaushal and Paul O'Neill