Neither threat is new, but both have been uttered again this week, and with more vehemence than before.
Threat 1 : Iran
Our good friends the Iranians (not!) are reputed to be preparing an army to launch against the US, waging war against the country’s infrastructure such as our power grid, water supplies, and other public infrastructure components.
But this ‘war’ would not be fought on American soil, and wouldn’t see combat between our troops and theirs. This would be a cyber-war, with the Iranian forces being hackers rather than soldiers, and rather than risking their lives on US soil, they’d be attacking our systems from the comfort of their living room tables.
The results to us would be the same. There’s no difference to us, as between dynamite bombs and logic bombs, when it comes to destroying the control system for a major power substation, a hydro-electric dam, or a water treatment facility. If when we turn the tap, no water comes out, or if when we flip the switch, the light doesn’t go on, we’re identically affected, no matter what the cause.
More details about this threat here.
Threat 2 : North Korea
The North Koreans also had a message of hate to share with us this week. Their top soldier – their Army Chief of Staff – claimed they had unspecified weapons that could ‘defeat the US at a single blow’.
No-one is sure what this would be, and it may well be based more on rhetoric than real substance, but it isn’t a good feeling to have the top soldier of a country that is still technically at war with us to threaten to destroy us completely.
More details about this threat here.
Analysis and Comment
Modern warfare is totally different to that of 50 years ago. Fifty and more years ago, warfare was low intensity, it occurred over an extended period of time, and the ultimate victory would almost invariably go to the country able to allocate the most men, money and industrial manufacturing to the conflict.
With the US having by far the strongest economy in the world, and one of the largest populations, it was able to field huge armies and both supply and resupply its armed forces at rates vastly greatly than any opposing forces. Our ability to win any conflict that we fully committed to was close to assured.
But these days warfare is high intensity and can be all over and done with in a matter of minutes (if nuclear), or days/weeks (if conventional). High intensity wars are not so dependent on a country’s economic strength or even its pool of available manpower, because the war is generally over and done with during the first round, based on the forces and material that the opposing sides have on day one of the conflict.
There is no time to induct and train up and deploy more troops, there is no time to start producing more planes, tanks, and ships. The war has been won or lost well before then.
With the US running down the size of its standing forces, with it reducing not only the number of planes, tanks and warships, but also its stocks of missiles, bombs, and even bullets, we no longer have an unstoppable lead up front. And even if we did survive the first round of a high intensity conflict, how long would it be before we could start resupplying? How long does it take to build a new warship? A year or more, sometimes five years or more.
How long does it take to build a new plane? While a new plane only takes maybe a week on the assembly line, the real question is ‘how long does it take to build a new assembly line, and new factories to manufacture the sub-assemblies for the planes? The answer there is again measured in years, not weeks or months.
The other feature of modern warfare is that it is like guerrilla warfare on steroids. The key thing about guerrilla warfare is the imbalance of forces. Traditionally, an attacking force needs to be two to three times the size of the defending force to win an encounter; with guerrilla warfare, tiny teams of men can tie up tens or hundreds of times more of the opposing force.
The concept of guerrilla warfare on steroids is that whereas before it would have taken a team of maybe ten special ops soldiers days or weeks to hit each target in enemy territory, and they would have been vulnerable to enemy countermeasures, now it takes only one clever hacker perhaps no more than a few hours to destroy the control systems for the target that previously would have been destroyed by tons of high explosive instead. A hacker could wake up in his bed at home in the morning, then after breakfast work from his kitchen table. By lunchtime he might have destroyed multiple high value enemy targets, then after a comfortable lunch, he could repeat the exercise again for the afternoon, never having personally put himself at risk.
These are the problems and these are the vulnerabilities the US now faces, totally like any threats of ever before. Our military might – such as it may be these days – is powerless to protect us against a ‘suitcase nuke’ or a biotoxin strike or a remote hacker.
Oh – two more things. First – this type of future war won’t be fought on a distant battlefield in a far-away foreign country. For essentially the first time in our nation’s history, this war will be fought in the American homeland, and its casualties will be ordinary US citizens – people like you and me.
Second – the overall vulnerabilities of US society magnify the disruptive effects of attacks on our infrastructure.
The loss of power is more than no lights at home. It means no power for the factories that make the food we eat, no power for the hospitals, and so on and so on (okay, to be exact, most hospitals have emergency power systems that provide unknown amounts of power, of unknown reliability, for unknown periods of time, but you get our point).
The New Great Equalizers
Back in the days of the wild west, the gun was referred to as the great equalizer. No longer was the outcome of a fight dependent on the person with the greatest physical strength. Even the puniest of men and the frailest of women could compete on equal terms, based not on physical prowess but instead on skill at arms with a gun.
Today we have two new great equalizers. The first is computer hacking. For the first time in our country’s history, threats to our national security do not require a stronger country with a more powerful economy and a larger army; any puny little country with a handful of clever computer hackers could potentially bring us to our knees more quickly than a super-power with a 10 million man army.
The second is the NBC threat : Nuclear, biological and chemical weapons. A drop of toxin in a city water supply, a suitcase nuke exploded downtown in the center of your city, or – worst of all – a single EMP pulse which could destroy most of the electronics and electrics of the entire country – these weapons are trickling down to smaller and smaller countries.
The ‘nuclear club’ of countries that possess nuclear weapons, once the exclusive preserve of the US, UK, France and USSR, is now getting crowded with around ten countries now having nuclear weapons, and plenty more working their way towards that goal. And with tens of thousands of nuclear weapons ‘out there’ – particular those formerly belonging to the Soviet Union before it broke up, who’s not to say there are a few stray ones in the hands of evil doers.
Chemical and biological weapon capabilities are even more widespread.
Bottom Line
If it isn’t already obvious – our country is massively at risk of man-made disruption – of ‘The End of the World as We Know It’.
And with our fragile society and its lack of reserves and redundancies in supply lines and sources, any disruption will threaten much broader consequences. Whether such disruptions might take three months or three years to resolve becomes irrelevant when society starts to collapse after three days of disruption and is completely destroyed after three weeks.
How long could you manage with no food, no water, and no utilities, and roving gangs of desperate citizens keen to take whatever you might still have from you, by force if necessary?
We need to be prepping.