Colder Skies: Can the U.S. Air Force Compete over the Arctic?

July 2, 2021 Topic: Arctic Region: arctic Blog Brand: The Reboot Tags: ArcticU.S. MilitaryU.S. Air ForceU.S. NavyRussiaChina

Colder Skies: Can the U.S. Air Force Compete over the Arctic?

The existing Arctic Strategy is rather banal—and the banality is baked into it.

 

In a sense the U.S. military could take advantage of role reversal in the Arctic, making the theater a laboratory for anti-access American style. Hostile forces may operate off U.S. seacoasts and will need managing if so. Fielding armaments able to reach out from land in concert with seagoing forces, and devising and practicing the necessary joint tactics, could let U.S. commanders glimpse the methods deployed by red teams around the world. And getting in the red team’s mind is a crucial step toward defeating it.

By augmenting its home-field advantage in the Arctic, then, the Pentagon might even the odds against home teams in Eurasia. The Arctic Strategy is a good start. But one hopes the service leadership will mix a little Patton into its thinking to go with the Westmoreland.

 

James Holmes is J. C. Wylie Chair of Maritime Strategy at the Naval War College and author of “Visualize Chinese Sea Power,” in the current issue of the Naval Institute Proceedings. The views voiced here are his alone.

This article first appeared last year.

Image: Flickr.