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Pentagon invites allies for defense
strategy discussion
 (Undersecretary of Defense Douglas
Feith) | WASHINGTON, March
18 (Xinhuanet) -- The Pentagon on Friday released its annual National Defense
Strategy that emphasizes agility to deal with strategic uncertainty and
preventative actions, including pre-emptive strikes, to deal with potential
crises.
Undersecretary of Defense Douglas Feith said at a news
conference that three of the main ideas concerning the defense strategy are: the
need to deal with strategic uncertainty; the value of early measures to prevent
problems from becoming crises, or crises from becoming wars; and the importance
of building partnership capacity.
The unclassified National Defense Strategy is the
guidance for the Pentagon to implement the National Security Strategy issued in
Sept. 2002. It also serves as the foundation for the Quadrennial Defense Review
(QDR) process, expected to be completedby early next year.
Feith said the new defense strategy reaffirmed the
key concepts that were the framework for the QDR of 2001, and also "incorporate
lessons learned over the last four years."
"The world has changed very substantially since the
end of the Cold War," he said." The kinds of structures that existed during the
Cold War don't now exist. That's part of the reason that we're emphasizing
strategic uncertainty."
Feith said "early measures," or preventive measures,
were a critical component of active, layered defense. "These are all actions
that are taken to prevent problems from becoming crises, as I said, and crises
from becoming wars," he said.
Feith said the term "preventive" is not the same
thing as preemption, but he defended the pre-emptive policy adopted by the Bush
administration. "Under the most dangerous and compelling circumstances,
prevention might require the use of force," he said.
The new defense strategy defines four strategic
objectives, Feith said. The first is securing the United States from direct
attack. The second is securing strategic access and retaining freedom of action
for key regions and lines of communication and the global commons.
The third objective, he said, is strengthening
alliances and partnerships. And the fourth is establishing security conditions
conducive to a favorable international order.
At the news conference, Rear Admiral William
Sullivan, vice director of the Pentagon's Strategy, Plans and Policy Office,
alsounveiled the parallel National Military Strategy. The military strategy
makes operational guidance for implementing the National Defense Strategy.
"It talks about protecting the homeland, about
preventing conflicts and surprise attacks, and about prevailing, in the event
that we actually need to get into conflict," Sullivan said.
"The principles that are espoused stress agility, the
ability to react quickly," he said. "And it really stresses jointness and
integration, and as I mentioned, not just integration among the services, but
integration with our friends and allies."Enditem
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