392. The Army’s Next Failed War: Large Scale Combat Operations

[Editor’s Note:  Army Mad Scientist’s enduring mission is to explore the Operational Environment (OE) and the changing character of warfare on behalf of the Army.  One of the tools we use — crowdsourcing — engages our extensive community of action to help broaden the Army’s horizons and explore future possibilities; discerning the impacts emergent technologies and trends will have on the OE and the future of combat; and harnessing a divergence of opinion as a check against group think and mirror imaging.

We are pleased to feature today’s post by guest blogger MAJ Anthony Joyce, Army Strategist and best-selling role-playing games designer, adapted from his winning twitter thread submission to our Fall / Winter Writing Contest.  His insightful #MadSciDivergence submission helps us broaden our aperture regarding the OE and explore where the Army could be wrong about our vision of the future of competition and conflict.  Given the on-going Large Scale Combat Operations (LSCO) in Ukraine, and the emergent lessons we (and our adversaries!) are learning from it, MAJ Joyce’s winning submission is most timely.  One month on, surely the Russian General Staff wishes it could turn back the clock to implement his sage advice and conduct “multiple [wargame] iterations… [to] validate/ invalidate LSCO as a strategy,” using a “red team free of [Russian] military biases and the [Russian] way of war”!  Be sure to check out the link to MAJ Joyce’s illustrative twitter thread at the end of this post — Enjoy!]

“The Army’s Next Failed War: Large Scale Combat Operations”

Where the Army is wrong about the vision of future competition and conflict.

The U.S. Army has adopted Large Scale Combat Operations (LSCO) as the method of warfare to combat our adversaries, specifically China and Russia, both of whom have robust offensive and defensive capabilities across all spectrums of warfare.

The Army’s focus on LSCO is driving the Joint Capability Integration and Development System (JCIDS) to produce technology and capabilities that are inefficient and ineffective against these peer adversaries by ignoring issues created by massing friendly forces on the battlefield.

Chinese Dongfeng-17 mounting a hypersonic glide vehicle. / Source: TRADOC G-2’s Worldwide Equipment Guide (WEG)

The Army is pivoting to the Division as the unit of action at the same time it is attempting to defeat an adversary that has nuclear and hypersonic weapons capable of destroying massed forces within a kill zone of over 1,750 miles (the range of some hypersonic weapons).

It is unlikely a Division can survive long enough to make it to the enemy forward line of troops, and if it did, it likely means the U.S. has obtained an extreme advantage by surpassing the enemy’s air, sea, and long range fires capabilities.  However, LSCO still remains a viable means of warfare against adversaries that cannot deter massing of forces and U.S. projection of power from CONUS to the battlefield.

War with China or Russia will not come as a surprise. The U.S. requires a lengthy public and political process of authorizing the use of force and mobilization of forces required to execute LSCO against China or Russia.  Both of these adversaries are going to be aware and ready for U.S. military actions against them. They can immediately begin using cyber-attacks to degrade the U.S. military’s ability to mobilize and deploy forces from the U.S. to overseas Air and Sea Ports of Debarkation (APODs/ SPODs).  The logistical burden to mobilize, deploy, and mass forces required for LSCO is enormous, and the logistical networks upon which our operational forces rely are vulnerable to both cyber and conventional attacks by our adversaries.

Executing LSCO doctrine against China and Russia fails to answer how to safely enter into theater with U.S. forces without being destroyed at an APOD or SPOD.  Due to the U.S. political process, massing forces at an overseas APOD/SPOD and Army Prepositioned Stock (APS) sites provide targets for attack.

The U.S. Army should fund the development and execution of a LSCO wargame depicting a conflict between the U.S. and peer adversaries covering the phases of mobilization, deployment, and massing of forces at the Forward Line of Troops to initial contact with the enemy.  Additionally, the wargame should have two sides, a U.S. side played by U.S. officers and a red team representing adversaries played by non-American Chinese or Russian military experts or military officers from nations with a cultural understanding of our enemies — such as military officers/experts from the Republic of Korea, Japan, or NATO allies. It is crucial that the red team is free of American military biases and the U.S. way of war.  Multiple iterations of this wargame will validate/invalidate LSCO as a strategy or lead to strategic innovation for future wars with near-peer adversaries.

If you enjoyed this post, check out MAJ Joyce‘s winning twitter thread here

… explore the following related content about our adversaries — China and Russia — and how they engage in competition, crisis, and conflict:

The Operational Environment (2021-2030): Great Power Competition, Crisis, and Conflict, along with its source document

China and Russia: Achieving Decision Dominance and Information Advantage by Ian Sullivan, along with the comprehensive paper from which it was excerpted

How China Fights and associated podcast, and  How Russia Fights and associated podcast

“No Option is Excluded” — Using Wargaming to Envision a Chinese Assault on Taiwan and Would You Like to Play a Game? Wargaming as a Learning Experience and Key Assumptions Check, by Ian Sullivan

… and review these complementary divergent posts regarding LSCO:

“Tenth Man” – Challenging our Assumptions about the Operational Environment and Warfare (Part 1)

Weighing Effort in the Future Strategic Environment 2028-2035 and In Medias Res, by MAJ James P. Micciche and CW3 Nick Rife

Are We Ready for the Post-digital Hyper-war? by Capt Martin Crilly, British Army

About the Author:  MAJ Anthony Joyce is a U.S. Army Strategist (FA59) currently assigned to the Combined Arms Center as a Military Analyst. When taking a break from considering the impacts of nuclear weapons in warfare, Anthony is a best-selling Dungeons & Dragons game designer who enjoys going on adventures with his wife and three young boys.

Disclaimer: The views expressed in this blog post do not necessarily reflect those of the U.S. Department of Defense, Department of the Army, Army Futures Command (AFC), or Training and Doctrine Command (TRADOC).

Share on Facebook Share on LinkedIn

3 Replies to “392. The Army’s Next Failed War: Large Scale Combat Operations”

  1. Interesting read. I do agree with the premise however, we need to remember that a US led coalition attack of either Russia or China is going to be a reaction to their belligerence, likely in the form of their conducting expeditionary offensive operations against a treaty partner. Russia has shown us that an Army built on active defense, can struggle with offensive operations. China’s military has yet to prove their ability to be expeditionary either. For us, theater opening, and sustainment of a lodgment are areas that we must train and equip for. The idea that we will be able to do that unmolested by an enemy with precision long range fires is not in doubt, Although, even with hypersonics, the idea that either country could mass those fires to keep a coalition from establishing a lodgment is at this point, wild speculation

Leave a Reply to iankersey2 Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *