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2900 South Quincy Street, Suite 300A Arlington, VA 22206 brm@mccaffreyassociates 703-824-5160

Strategic National Security Challenges Facing the United States Presentation to: Rotary Club of San Jose February 24, 2010 BARRY R. McCAFFREY GENERAL, USA (RETIRED) Adjunct Professor of International Affairs United States Military Academy. 2900 South Quincy Street, Suite 300A

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2900 South Quincy Street, Suite 300A Arlington, VA 22206 brm@mccaffreyassociates 703-824-5160

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  1. Strategic National Security Challenges Facing the United StatesPresentation to:Rotary Club of San Jose February 24, 2010BARRY R. McCAFFREYGENERAL, USA (RETIRED) Adjunct Professor of International Affairs United States Military Academy 2900 South Quincy Street, Suite 300A Arlington, VA 22206 brm@mccaffreyassociates.com 703-824-5160

  2. Biography of General Barry R. McCaffrey, USA (RET.) Barry McCaffrey served in the United States Army for 32 years and retired as a four-star General. At retirement, he was the most highly decorated serving General, having been awarded three Purple Heart medals (wounded in combat three times), two Distinguished Service Crosses (the nation’s second highest award for valor) and two Silver Stars for valor. For five years after leaving the military, General McCaffrey served as the Director of the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP). Upon leaving government service in 2001, he served as the Bradley Distinguished Professor of International Security Studies for five years at the United States Military Academy at West Point, NY. He continues as an Adjunct Professor of International Affairs. In October 2004, General McCaffrey was elected by the Board of Directors of HNTB Corporation (www.hntb.com) where he also serves as the chairman for the company’s federal business unit. HNTB Corporation is an employee-owned infrastructure firm known and respected for its work in transportation, tolls, bridges, aviation, rail, architecture and urban design and planning for federal, state and municipal clients. Currently, General McCaffrey is President of his own consulting firm based in Arlington, Virginia www.mccaffreyassociates.com. He also serves as a national security and terrorism analyst for NBC News.  General McCaffrey graduated from Phillips Academy, Andover, Mass., in 1960; and from West Point with a BS in 1964. He earned a master's degree in American Government from American University and attended the Harvard University National Security Program as well as the Business School Executive Education Program. General McCaffrey is married to Jill Ann McCaffrey, with whom he has three children and six grandchildren. Their son, Colonel Sean McCaffrey, is currently serving as an Army Infantry Brigade Commander at Ft. Benning, GA. 2 of 17

  3. The Eight Principle Challenges to Global Security The proliferation of nuclear, biological, and chemical weapons. Regional war among nation states. Civil war and failed states. International terrorism. The global recession and poverty. International crime and drug cartels. Humanitarian crisis/refugees. 3 of 17

  4. Global Tools to Shape the International Environment • Diplomacy is under-resourced and poorly organized. • InternationalDevelopmentAssistance lacks money and leadership. • ArmsControl is more effective than air attacks. • InternationalLawEnforcementCooperation is a major success. • NonproliferationInitiatives lack a modern framework and international leadership. • ShapingWorldOpinion is a function of sound policy and collective diplomacy -- not slick public relations. • InternationalCovertActionandCollectionPotential has improved enormously with new resources and courageous dedication by the global cooperative intelligence community. • UN/NATO/USMilitaryIntervention must be the tool of last resort. When employed it must be violent, focused on clear objectives, and fully integrated with other elements of national power. 4 of 17

  5. Protecting America’s critical infrastructure and key assets is a formidable challenge. Our open and technologically complex society presents a huge array of targets. The macro numbers are enormous: 87,000 communities; 1,800 federal reservoirs; 2,800 power plants and 104 commercial nuclear power plants; 5,000 airports; 120,000 miles of railroads; 590,000 bridges; 2 million miles of pipeline; 80,000 dams. 85% of our critical infrastructure is privately held. Critical Infrastructure Protection (CIP) must be a public-private enterprise. Owner-operators must protect their resources. It is impossible to defend everything against every conceivable threat. We must move beyond gates, guards, and guns. We need to design security features into new infrastructure. We need new technology to protect potentially high-casualty targets. Federal Government support is vital in the transportation sector. Transportation choke points are a particular concern. We must develop a coordinated mechanism for assessing vulnerabilities and evaluating risk mitigation activities. Protecting US Critical Infrastructure 5 of 17

  6. The US economy will recover significantly in the coming 24 months despite the ongoing recession caused by: The credit market meltdown. (US spending 106% of what we produce past 20 years) The collapse of the housing bubble. Trade export-import balance deficits. Tax revenue vs. expenditure shortfalls. ($66 trillion unfunded liability plus $2 trillion stimulus) A grossly weakened US currency. (Federal Gov. debt $3.8 trillion 1998 to $12.3 trillion 2010) Oil price fluctuations. Incompetence in US economic regulatory mechanisms. Corruption in senior financial community leadership. Massive loss of jobs (10% unemployment – December 2009) particularly in the industrial base. The US Economy in Turmoil - 2010 6 of 17

  7. 2008 global GDP was $60 trillion + US contributed 25% ($14 trillion) China only contributed ($4 trillion+) US Defense spending 4.7% of GDP. (Includes war direct expenditures). US tops the World Economic Forum global competitiveness report. US attracted $2 trillion + in foreign direct investment in 2007. (UK – Hong Kong – France next top three each @ $1 trillion) US has manufacturing lead in pharmaceuticals and aerospace. 25% of the world’s total output. Giant US GDP: Brazil GDP = Florida + Illinois GDP Russia GDP = Texas GDP India GDP = ½ of California GDP Leading global exporters -- US, China, and Germany all export over $1 trillion each. The Powerful US Global Economy 7 of 17

  8. Iraq – A Growing Success • General Dave Petraeus as CENTCOM Commander and General Ray Odierno in Iraq have turned around the Iraq Civil War – for now. • US has expended $684 billion in war-related funding. • The morale, fighting effectiveness, and counter-insurgency skills of U.S. combat forces continue to be simply awe-inspiring. (4,377 killed; 31,633 wounded). • Secretary Gates and Secretary Clinton are beginning to repair foreign and national security policy in the Middle East. Tensions with Syria and Turkey are somewhat reduced. Iran is on the edge. • Political reconciliation talks with the Sunnis show positive response. Most Shia militia forces maintain an uneasy “cease fire” with US and Iraqi forces. Iranian intervention in the Iraqi civil war is a decreasing factor. • The Iraqi Army is real, growing, and much more willing to fight. However, they are still not adequately equipped. The Iraqi Police are now the focus of enormous new efforts in training, leadership development, and equipment. (558,000 military and police). • The Maliki Administration is beginning to function. The Shia dominated government is now beginning to respond to US pressure to reach out to the Sunnis and Kurds. • US Special Operations Forces largely succeeded in defeating the foreign jihadist threat at a tactical level. AQI has fled to the northwest – Mosul and Baquba. The recent Baghdad bombings are an indication of the wave of bloodshed to come. • U.S. combat forces will reduce their footprint to get down to 6 to 7 combat brigades. • Iraq cannot sustain economic recovery (28.2 million people, GDP $113 billion) without enhanced, long-term international budgetary support. 8 of 17

  9. Afghanistan in Peril - 2010 • Afghanistan (28 million people, GDP $23 billion) has become a nation with a struggling democratic government; a developing economy; a rapidly growing, disciplined Army; a mostly free press; and active diplomatic and economic ties with its neighbors and the world. • The level of fighting against the Taliban has intensified rapidly. NATO combat forces will increase to 135,000 troops in Afghanistan. NATO now has lead for the entire effort (42 nations). • Afghanistan is a Narco-state which produced more than 7,700 tons of opium in 2008 (93% of the global heroin trade). $3.4 Billion in criminal money. 900,000 drug users. Two million people are employed in the opium trade. Taliban and warlords collect $200-$400 million a year from opium production. • The Afghan National Army will increase from 97,000 to 171,600 by end of next year. Afghan National Police will increase from 94,000 to 134,000. Long term goals to expand Afghan security force to 240,000 soldiers and 160,000 police officers. • The rapid creation of the Afghan National Army and Police is an enormous success story. These soldiers are the most disciplined, and effective military force in Afghanistan’s history. In general, these troops are very courageous, and aggressive in field operations. The Afghan Army is badly under-resourced. The Afghan Police are a disaster. 9 of 17

  10. Afghanistan in Peril - 2010 • The US will triple non-military aid to Pakistan to $1.5 billion a year for five years. (Since 2002 total $12.3 billion total aid). The Pakistan Armed Forces are now taking aggressive military offensive action against Taliban in the Frontier Tribal Areas (FATA). • NATO Forces now, after eight years of war, have a sensible, coherent command structure. • Respect the Enemy – 5,788 US killed and wounded. July 09 – 828 IED attacks. • Afghanistan – 2nd most corrupt nation on earth, and the 5th most impoverished. • This war is about 40,000 villages. 10 of 17

  11. Vietnam - 2010 • Vietnam land area = Ohio, Tennessee, and Kentucky combined. • 72% of the population is rural. • Population of 86 million people. (85% ethnic Vietnamese with 54 minority groups.) • Vietnam has modernized dramatically in the past ten years. • United States is largest source of foreign investment. • Modern high speed highways; standard gage railroad. Ho Chi Minh City (HCMC) the former Saigon is now a megalopolis of eight million people with huge skyscrapers and modern hotels. • Thriving agriculture -- Vietnam is second largest exporter of rice in the world. (After Thailand). • Vietnam has the 9th largest number of students in the world studying in the US -- and they actually then return to Vietnam. • There is almost no violent or street crime in Vietnam. • Drug addiction is a very serious problem. • 87 treatment centers for the 173,000 registered addicts. Possession of more than 600 grams of heroin is a mandatory death penalty. • The economy has increased dramatically. • The state retains direct control of 36% of the national GDP. Per capita income today is $1000 -- per capita income in 1994 was $220. 11 of 17

  12. VVMF Delegation • Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund (VVMF) Founder and President Jan Scruggs has developed a remarkable series of in-country engagement programs with the Vietnamese people. • VVMF Project Renew -- Unexploded Munitions (UXO) Neutralization Program -- funded by $1 million of congressionally appropriated money. • 62 Vietnamese employees trained by Norwegian NGO partners • Equipped and paid by the VVMF to neutralize wartime munitions. • Each year, more than 1000 Vietnamese are killed or injured by unexploded military munitions (UXO). • Estimated 350,000+ metric tons of UXO munitions. (40% Vietnamese… 60% US). • VVMF has also assisted Vietnamese children’s educational programs in impoverished Quang Tri Province. • This year opened a school built with $75,000 of private VVMF donations 12 of 17

  13. The Situation in Mexico The Mexican State is engaged in an increasingly violent, internal struggle against heavily armed narco-criminal cartels. (14,000 murdered in past 24 months). Mexico’s courageous and honest senior leadership – President Felipe Calderon, the Mexican Army and Navy, and SSP Secretary of Federal Police leader Genaro Luna are successfully confronting criminal drug cartels. The United States has provided only modest support to the Government of Mexico to date. ($400 million). President Calderon has boldly used the tool of extradition to the US. (86 major drug criminals sent north.) Mexico has formed a strategy to break up the four major drug cartels into 50 smaller entities and strip away their firepower and huge financial resources. President Calderon has committed his government to the “Limpiemos Mexico” campaign to “clean up Mexico”. There is a clear understanding that this is an eight-year campaign—not a short-term surge. President Obama has endorsed the promising US-Mexican Merida Initiative. ($900 million promised). This vital program is under-funded and slow to be implemented. Much is at stake for future US economic and national security policy. The drug menace and drug addiction is central to the US criminal and social malignancy that has put more than 2 million Americans behind bars, clogged our courts, and placed enormous burdens on our health system. Drug legalization would intensify the addiction problem and incentivize the drug cartels. The Obama Administration has dramatically re-engaged with Mexico. (Sec. Clinton, Sec. Napolitano, Attorney General Holder) 13 of 17

  14. California Infrastructure Investment Challenges • Fiscal crisis ($20 billion budget deficit) • Continually growing population (population to increase to 50 million people by 2030). • Critical unfunded Infrastructure requirements • Highways • Passenger Rail/Transit • Cargo/Freight (port of Los Angeles, freight rail infrastructure) • Airports (LAX, SFO, SD) • Education (Universities, Public Schools) • Water Infrastructure (drinking water, unsafe levees) • Power (recent brown-outs) • Public purse won’t fund all requirements (Public-Private, Public-Public Partnerships). • Innovative financing = a must. 14 of 17

  15. California High Speed Rail • CA to receive $2.25 billion (largest of any state) in stimulus funds to develop high-speed rail line. (Anaheim to San Francisco) • Anaheim to San Francisco HSR projected cost $42 billion. • Over 5.5 million people ride CA’s three intercity rails – busiest routes in the US (after Northeast Corridor). • High-speed train system will generate 600,000 construction-related jobs (over 8 years). • HSR will alleviate the need for thousands of extra miles of new freeway. (Los Angeles, Bay Area, and San Diego are in the Nation’s top 5 congested urban areas). http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/rail_california.pdf 15 of 17

  16. International SecurityLooking Toward the Future Russia relations with the west will grow more hostile – Prime Minister Putin has re-established authoritarian control of the state and its mechanisms. China will continue to remain economically strong -- the PRC will emerge as a major Pacific naval and air force military power. The crisis in Iraq will stabilize and international forces will largely withdraw in the coming 36 months. The next five years in Afghanistan will be complex. The political and economic situation may improve with massive new resources. The country is in misery. North Korea will come apart. The international community must facilitate a soft landing for this dangerous regional nuclear power. (Five+ possible nuclear weapons and 200 missiles that can range Japan and South Korea). 250,000 North Koreans are starving in concentration camps. One million have died. The situation in Pakistan is unstable. The international presence in Afghanistan would be untenable without Pakistani support. (80% all NATO logistics by truck thru Pakistan). 16 of 17

  17. India will become a global political, economic, and military power. Iran (Persian/Shia) will go nuclear and create instability in the Persian Gulf. The Sunni Arab nations will create a nuclear-military coalition. Japanese economic, political, and military power will attain global proportions. Saudi Arabia will continue to modernize, maintain stability, and greatly improve the capabilities of their Armed Forces and internal security. Mexico is in desperate need of serious political and economic support to confront violent criminal drug cartels. The death of Castro -- meltdown of repression – 250,000 Cuban refugees within 36 months. Political confrontation with Chavez in Venezuela -- instability and oil. Islamic terrorists will strike repeatedly in the coming five years. International Security Looking Toward the Future 17 of 17

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