Where is the Trump Administration with its Inaugural National Security Strategy of the United States?

By: - July 19, 2017

 

“There is no other way to describe this political situation other than: political party power overrides the security of the American people and this great nation.”

On November 14, 2016, I wrote a piece for OpsLens regarding the critical importance of President Trump’s first NSS (or colloquially, the “President’s Blue Book”) to immediately conclude and promulgate America’s Vital and Major National Security Interests. In that article, I stated that “there is no time to waste with an extended period of the status quo.”

Under the Goldwater-Nichols Defense Department Reorganization Act of 1986, [amending Title 50, Chapter 15, Section 404a of the US Code, paragraph (a)(3)] is the recommendation that “Not later than 150 days after the date on which a new President takes office (in this case, about June 18, 2017), the President shall transmit to Congress a national security strategy report under this section.” As of this date, President Trump’s team is still working this seminal document.

Why is this so important? Because the NSS, if developed properly, forces the Trump Administration to assess, analyze, conceive, deconflict, synchronize, and promulgate the U.S. government’s blueprint (that is, the whole of government and across the elements of national power), for operating effectively and efficiently within the “real world” as it exists today. Some of this strategy will be classified within the United States Government (USG). But much of the NSS will be published in an unclassified President’s Blue Book that informs, inter alia, to those relevant U.S. actors (but, outside the classified system), our allies, our trade partners, and our adversaries (as a broadly written deterrent).

The USG will not be able to effectively or efficiently engage our priority objectives, or our threats, at the day-to-day tactical level without a sound vision and grand strategy — built upon a clear understanding of USG vital and major interests and the objectives and programs required to achieve each interest.

What is the policy and strategy for the USG to determine which threats are most dangerous, in what priority, and at what level of resources? With a USG national debt of about $20 trillion, what levels of USG spending are appropriate for national security versus health insurance, infrastructure restoration, social security, welfare, etc.? At a national security level, what is the right size for each of the armed services? What major weapons systems and how many of each are required to defeat the threats and keep America safe?

Just envision the many competing threats to the USG, which among these are: North Korea’s emerging capability to deliver nuclear warheads around the globe; Iran’s emerging nuclear capability, state-sponsorship of terrorism, and further destabilization of the Middle East; ISIS’ global terrorism threat; Russia’s threat to Eastern Europe (starting with Crimea and Ukraine); major cyber threats from Russia, China, Iran, North Korea, and others. How does the USG address major trans-regional issues, such as significant refugee migration, illegal drugs, sex slavery, etc.?

How does the USG address the competition for resources among the U.S. economy sector, run-away social/welfare entitlements, and national security interests, while still growing the U.S. economy at four percent per year — which is required to service the USG debt? When our policies and priorities are adrift, so is our budget and ability to achieve efficient spending during an austere budgetary environment.

I fully recognize that President Trump has been obstructed from seating his full contingent of political appointments in the Executive branch. This fact is a danger to America’s national security. There is no other way to describe this political situation other than: political party power overrides the security of the American people and this great nation.

Based upon this dangerous political obstruction, I recommend that President Trump leverage this issue to obtain U.S. Senate confirmation of every National Security-related position appointment, down to the Assistant Secretary-level, within the next 30 days. Because of these dire circumstances, President Trump should be granted until September 30, 2017 to complete a comprehensive NSS. Let’s all get to work and stop risking the national and fiscal security of America and its people.

  • RSS WND

    • University 'occupations': What they mean to you
      The “occupying thing," as one young, nice, “woke" professor – a genuine expert in her field – called it, is happening on her campus, though they had rather wished that it wouldn't. The tents and the noise and the crowds interfere with the normal business of the university – learning and advancing knowledge. In many… […]
    • The steady slide towards tyranny: How freedom dies from A to Z
      The American governmental scheme is sliding ever closer towards a pervasive authoritarianism. The American people, the permanent underclass in America, have allowed themselves to be so distracted and divided that they have failed to notice the building blocks of tyranny being laid down right under their noses by the architects of the Deep State. This… […]
    • Hail, Columbia?
      Many of the anti-Israel protesters at Columbia and other college campuses are dwelling in cushy tents on the quad. These tents look pretty modern and uniform; one could only wonder who is paying for all this? In 1754, an advertisement for Columbia (then known as King's College), promised, "The chief thing that is aimed at… […]
    • Making race the measure of all things
      Did you ever think you would see the day when Jewish students on elite college campuses were afraid to attend classes? Pro-Hamas mobs have taken over. They have built tent cities and made it clear that Jews and anyone supporting Israel is an enemy. At Columbia University, Israel-born Shai Davidai, an assistant professor at the… […]
    • No, demonstrations today are not like the 1960s
      The current demonstrations on college campuses against Israel remind some of the unrest on college campuses during the 1960s. But the comparison is not a good one. The unrest of the 1960s was defined by the war in Vietnam and by the Civil Rights Movement. Both had practical, personal impact on young Americans in their… […]
    • Amazing story: Reagan gifted Israel 'Iron Dome' that Biden blocked
      Watch Larry's most recent "Week in Review" video. Iran, the world's leading terrorist nation (which previously held Americans hostage for 444 days until Reagan secured their release), recently rained down 120 ballistic missiles, 170 drones and 30 cruise missiles on Israel. It was an unprecedented direct attack following their previous Hamas proxy attack on Oct.… […]
    • Trump-haters hit a brick wall at SCOTUS
      Trump-hating prosecutors' joy ride hit a brick wall in the Supreme Court last Thursday, where six Justices doubted and ridiculed liberals' attempts to prosecute Trump in federal court. This was so thoroughly a rout of Biden's minions that it also diminishes the impact of the ongoing New York County prosecution of Trump. Delusional Biden supporters… […]
    • 4 radical reforms to shrink the federal budget
      It was nearly 50 years ago that a liberal Congress completely dominated by Democrat big spenders passed a new set of budget rules – the Congressional Budget and Impoundment Control Act of 1974. It has been a complete and unmitigated disaster. Since the act's passage, the budget has been balanced four times and unbalanced 46… […]
    • Ship sliding away
      The post Ship sliding away appeared first on WND.
    • White House admits 'fixing' Biden's statements 148 times THIS YEAR!
      What Joe Biden says isn't what Joe Biden says, it seems. His multiple verbal blunders and mistakes are common knowledge these days – he admitted just a few days ago that voters wouldn't be able to trust "us." But all of that eventually gets "fixed" when the White House releases transcripts of his "statements." And… […]
  • Enter My WorldView