Cooperation in Innovation
By Adm. Dennis C. Blair, USN
Commander in Chief, U.S. Pacific Command
Welcome to the Spring issue of the Asia-Pacific Defense
FORUM. I need to say very little about enhancing our regional military
cooperation because the articles within speak about it better than I ever
could: a terrific explanation of this process by Cmdr. Kline from my
staff; an unbiased analysis from The Asian Wall Street Journal; the view
from Washington by Gen. Shelton; and the Republic of Korea, where the
Korean-U.S. alliance remains strongóa fleet review in India, with whom
multinational ties improve and increase dailyóand an effort to alleviate
suffering after a tragic earthquake, also in India.
I am especially pleased to have an Asian point of view on
the history of the peacekeeping efforts in East Timor-clearly the most
significant multinational operation in Asia and the Pacific in the last
several yearsódirect from the Commanding General of the UN Peacekeeping
Force, Lt. Gen. Boonsrang Niumpradit of the Royal Thai Army. We are
spotlighting his report, and adding supporting information and photos on
the most recent efforts of the UN transitional Administration in East
Timor (UNTAET).
Multmational operations are tapping into the enormous
talents of your young leaders. As Lt. Gen. Boonsrang points out in his
article, “The idealism which fires the UN peacekeepers in their quest to
contribute to international peace and security will enable them to
overcome any obstacles that come their way.” When I talk to those involved
in innovative efforts, both in experimentation and in breakthroughs with
multinational training and operations, I watch their eyes light up and see
their enthusiasm is contagious. By demanding that those in our armed
forces innovate and use their creativity in a systematic fashion, we are
realizing improvements we had never imagined, and our young leaders then
realize that they are contributing to the future of their services and
their countriesócreating what they will command.
With a little innovation, even old “war-horses” can still be useful. I
commanded the USS Kitty Hawk Carrier Battle Group several years ago and I
well remember our crewís enthusiasm in developing and fielding a new
information system there. This year Kitty Hawk celebrates her 40th
birthday as the oldest active ship in the U.S. Navy. Her crew tells me
sheís in the best shape of her life, but thatís only because those aboard
continue a legacy of innovation, coupled with huge efforts at
modernization, to keep the worldís lone permanently forward-deployed
aircraft carrier up-to-date.
Regardless of differences in our own levels of experience,
our most important challenge is to maintain our willingness to cooperate,
and to link that with an eagerness to innovate. The greatest gains in
military capability over the coming decades will come from emerging
technologiesóand combined adaptation and experimentation are the most
effective ways to take advantage of them. Future operations such as the
one in East Tinior will be so much the better if we have opportunities to
exercise together in combined fleet operations and in combined field
operationsóusing our most modern experimentation tools in a multinational
environment.
We soldiers, sailors, airmen, and Marines of the Pacific and
Indian Oceans are all members of "a mysterious fraternity born out of
smoke and the danger of death," as Stephen Crane once called it in The Red
Badge of Courage. We possess this comradeship not only because we happen
all to have undergone our individual experiences of hardship in our own
armed forces or just because we share a patriotic profession that is
dangerous in both war and peace. We are also forging more and more mutual
bonds because we can train together at the leading edge of innovation,
than successfully face international crises together.
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