Term Limits for the Navy? It’s Time to Let the Best Commanders Keep Sailing

August 6, 2021 Topic: Navy Region: Americas Blog Brand: The Reboot Tags: NavyPentagonMilitaryStrategyNaval Operations

Term Limits for the Navy? It’s Time to Let the Best Commanders Keep Sailing

Let’s enact Machiavellian rules for swapping out leaders—and stop changing things for change’s sake.

 

Machiavelli would approve. Oddly, navies representing authoritarian states have fared better in this regard in recent decades. Starting in the early 1960s, Adm. Sergey Gorshkov modernized the Soviet Navy by transitioning it from a backward coastal-defense force into an oceangoing navy able to challenge the U.S. Navy for maritime supremacy. Gorshkov served into the mid-1980s and wrote a book about sea power along his way. He was the right man for the times, and Moscow sagely left the Soviet Mahan in charge.

Communist China also displays a proclivity for long-serving chiefs of naval staff. Adm. Xiao Jinguang and Adm. Wu Shengli presided over the PLA Navy for over a decade, long enough to put their visions into force. In fact, Admiral Xiao, the navy’s founder, served from 1950-1980—outdoing even Gorshkov in longevity terms. Xiao fabricated a doctrine, methods, and hardware for “sabotage warfare at sea,” the ideal strategy for a country long on Maoist “people’s wars” and short on shipbuilding resources.

 

Admiral Wu served from 2006-2017, overseeing the most bracing time of growth and modernization in China’s naval history. Under Wu’s tutelage, for example, the navy undertook intensive fleet experiments, constructing numerous small ship classes for each ship type—guided-missile destroyers in particular. Mariners took the experimental vessels to sea to find out what elements of each design worked and didn’t work. Naval architects discarded the worst features of each design and merged the best features into a polished design suitable for mass production.

Wu was not the mastermind of Chinese naval strategy; that honor goes to Adm. Liu Huaqing, who headed the Chinese navy during the 1980s. So profound was Liu’s influence that Westerners took to calling him China’s Mahan, an officer of stature comparable to Admiral Gorshkov’s. But Wu did forge the implement necessary to execute Liu’s strategic vision, and that is no small accomplishment. In large measure the fleet now plying the seven seas represents Wu’s handiwork. Like Gorshkov and Xiao, he was the right man for his time. And Beijing granted him the time to succeed.

The upshot? Rather than enforce arbitrary term limits, Congress should change the law to allow presidential administrations and lawmakers the discretion to determine whether a commander remains in sync with the times or new blood is needed. It’s too late—and too much has happened—to keep Admiral Richardson on but Admiral Gilday is a young guy as flag officers go. He was commissioned in 1985. If he handles the rigors of great-power competition well, then he should stay on duty indefinitely. Let’s enact Machiavellian rules for swapping out leaders—and stop changing things for change’s sake.

When you find an expert steersman, keep that hand on the tiller throughout the voyage.

James Holmes is J. C. Wylie Chair of Maritime Strategy at the Naval War College. The views voiced here are his alone. This article is being republished due to reader interest.

Image: Flickr / Official U.S. Navy Page