New Pentagon chief racing to make changes before
Trump's exit
Chris Miller is looking to use his position to make
quick policy changes that incoming President Joe Biden is unlikely to overturn.
Chris
Miller has shown he plans to be more than a caretaker, and instead has ordered
changes that will have an outsize impact on the special operations community in
particular.
By LARA
SELIGMAN
11/18/2020
07:30 PM EST
https://www.politico.com/news/2020/11/18/chris-miller-pentagon-437971
Acting
Defense Secretary Chris Miller has just 63 days to put his stamp on the
Pentagon.
Miller, a
former Green Beret and counterterrorism professional, has been unexpectedly
vaulted from midlevel National Security Council desk officer to Pentagon chief
in under a year. Now, Miller is looking to use his position to make quick
policy changes that incoming President Joe Biden is unlikely to overturn before
the clock runs out on the Trump administration in late January.
In the nine
days since President Donald Trump fired Defense Secretary Mark Esper and
installed Miller in his place, Miller has shown he plans to be more than a
caretaker, and instead has ordered changes that will have an outsize impact on
the special operations community in particular. On Tuesday, he announced that
the U.S. will rapidly draw down to 2,500 troops by Jan. 15 in both Afghanistan
and Iraq, where commandos have increasingly borne the brunt of fighting in
recent years.
The move,
which Esper had resisted, put Miller at odds with Trump allies on Capitol Hill
who worry that a hasty withdrawal based on a political calendar — Trump will
leave office six days after the Jan. 15 drawdown deadline — could destabilize
security conditions in Afghanistan.
But Biden
is unlikely to reverse the drawdown. As vice president, Biden was the most
senior dissenting voice against a surge in Afghanistan in the early years of
Barack Obama's presidency, and has remained insistent over the past decade that
he wants to bring American troop numbers there down to just a few thousand.
“Miller may
ultimately be successful in dancing through the raindrops — leaving a residual
force for conducting [counterterrorism] missions and protecting the diplomatic
community, while also fulfilling the overall parameters of Trump’s campaign
promise,” said Marc Polymeropoulos, a retired CIA senior operations officer.
Among
Miller's top priorities is elevating the needs of America's elite special
operations forces — Navy SEALs, Army Green Berets, Marine Raiders — even as the
wars in the Middle East wind down and the Pentagon pivots to face competitors
Russia and China, experts say.
“If you
look at the last close to decade of his career, [Miller] has been heavily
involved in oversight of special operations,” said Luke Hartig, who worked on
counterterrorism at the NSC in the Obama administration. “This is an
opportunity for him to put his stamp on what he thinks that ought to look
like.”
On
Wednesday, Miller elevated the top civilian Pentagon official overseeing
special operations matters, establishing a direct reporting line to the defense
secretary and putting the position roughly on par with the civilian leaders of
the military branches in the Defense Department's hierarchy. Since 9/11, the
special operations community has taken on enormous responsibilities but its
civilian leaders have lacked the status and authorities of the services.
The change
also means greater civilian oversight, something lawmakers have called for in
recent years following the fatal ambush of U.S. special forces in Niger in 2017
and a series of scandals that have plagued the Navy SEAL community.
“Today with
the strong support of President Trump we are forging the next chapter in the
history of U.S. special operations forces and formalizing watershed reform,”
Miller said during a ceremony at Fort Bragg, N.C. “Right now, we start the
transition to provide greater civilian oversight of and critical advocacy for
our special operators.”
Visibility
of special operations matters at top levels of the Pentagon has long been a
source of tension between commandos and conventional forces, who must fight for
limited resources within the Pentagon budget. Experts had expected that the
former Green Beret would make elevating the issue a priority.
“It does
not surprise me that someone with a special operations background would want to
do this as it has been a sore subject with many special operators,” said Arnold
Punaro, retired Marine Corps major general and former staff director for the
Senate Armed Services Committee. He noted that the civilian position — known as
the assistant secretary of defense for special operations/low-intensity
conflict, or SO/LIC — traditionally has to push through layers of bureaucracy
to get anything done.
“From an
organizational standpoint there are clearly advantages to being a direct
report, especially to a secretary of defense that is of the same cloth,” Punaro
said.
One senior
defense official, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive
policy changes, noted that Congress has long been pushing the Pentagon to carry
out the shift.
“It puts
the special operations community at the table, where they haven’t been, even
though they are often tasked to carry out the missions,” the person said. “This
is not controversial."
However,
the decision prompted concerns about what it means for America’s most elite
military forces, with some worrying this could make it easier for Trump could
launch covert operations against Iran over its nuclear program in his final
days in office. The New York Times reported Monday that Trump had asked his
advisers for options to take actions against Iran's main nuclear site in the
coming weeks, which they talked him out of.
It also
raised questions about the rising influence of Ezra Cohen-Watnick — a close
Trump ally and aide to former national security adviser Mike Flynn — after the
White House ousted top DoD leaders and replaced them with loyalists.
Cohen-Watnick has been acting in the role of top spec ops official since the
summer and became the Pentagon's acting top intelligence official last week.
Yet experts
said the elevation would not have an operational impact. Rather, the shift is
bureaucratic, strengthening the line between Special Operations Command and the
defense secretary.
“Conspiratorial
minded persons may think this change is about chain-of-command and putting the
SecDef in direct control of [Special Operations Command] but that’s wrong —
this move changes nothing operationally,” said Mark Jacobson, a former senior
DoD official under Obama and historian of special operations now at Syracuse
University's Maxwell School.
However,
Jacobson expressed concern about the “timing” of the move and “Miller’s
motivations.”
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“You don’t
make a major bureaucratic change in an institution, particularly with regards
to organizations dealing with sensitive and complex issues, without thinking
through this,” he said.
The change
was actually ordered by the fiscal 2017 National Defense Authorization Act —
signed into law by President Barack Obama. While the role of special operations
forces has grown in size and scope since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, the
importance of the Pentagon civilian overseeing them has diminished, experts
say.
This meant
that military commanders, especially the head of Special Operations Command,
end up making critical decisions that should be made by civilian leaders,
argued retired Army Col. Mark Mitchell, who served as acting head of SO/LIC in
the Trump administration, in a May op-ed.
“The net
result is an inverted relationship that runs counter to the concept of civilian
oversight,” Mitchell wrote.
Many in the
special operations community, including Mitchell, have long argued that the
civilian position should be elevated to the undersecretary level. Miller
himself advocated for this change during his Wednesday remarks.
“I
personally think SO/LIC deserves to be an undersecretary of defense, but
unfortunately that’s beyond my authority and purview at that time,” said
Miller, who briefly served as the deputy in charge of special operations and
combating terrorism this year. “I know future generations will take that on.”
The change
announced Wednesday reflects the fact that special operations have greatly
increased in significance to America’s national security since 9/11, said
retired Col. Stu Bradin, president and CEO of the Global SOF Foundation. As the
Pentagon shifts its focus from counterterrorism to competition with Russia and
China, special forces will have an even more important role to play, he said.
“The shift
in focus to great power competition does not mean that SOF will be or should be
relegated to the back burner. On the contrary, our enemies are not looking to
fight us on the conventional battlefield,” Bradin said. “We must recognize the
importance of irregular warfare in this next set of threats. And, in our opinion,
the civilian oversight of special operations should be increased and elevated
accordingly."
Nahal Toosi
contributed to this report.


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