By Paul Bracken, Yale University
The United States has recognized a return to major power rivalry in recent official documents such as the National Security Strategyand the Nuclear Posture Review.
This is a useful step that catches up to a reality that analysts and many others have argued has been underway for some time.
It is especially important because it opens up new pastures for exploring strategy that have been overlooked because of the nature of American involvement in low intensity wars of counterinsurgency and anti-terrorism for nearly two decades.
In low intensity environments certain things are taken for granted, like air superiority, cyber dominance, and freedom of strategic access.
Obviously, these conditions cannot be assumed to hold in an environment of major power conflict.
Recognizing the change from a low to a more intense conflict environment in official documents is one thing.
But reshaping operations and strategy for this environment is something else altogether.
One of the main reasons the outbreak of World War I was such a surprise to everyone was that the preceding two decades had seen repeated political crises where there was a show of force – but no actual combat between the major powers.
They had grown accustomed to this and believed that every crisis would play out this way, with strong messages and force maneuvering, but without combat.
There was no crisis management that existed for actual combat, especially the early clashes of the campaign.
No one, for example, had conceived of limited strikes or retaliation, force disengagement, or messaging once the shooting started.
The result was that the generals and mobilization plans took over.
The key point for today is that there are many levels of intensity above counterinsurgency and counter terrorism, yet well short of total war. In terms of escalation intensity, this is about one-third up the escalation ladder.
Here, there are issues of war termination, disengagement, maneuvering for advantage, signaling, — and yes, further escalation — in a war that is quite limited compared to World War II, but far above the intensity of combat in Iraq and Afghanistan.
While a full-scale replay of a “1914 scenario” is always possible, there are several reasons to think that a limited war is more likely than an all-out one.
Two factors stand out.
First, the fact that an actual shooting war had started between the United States and Russia or China might produce a mutual shock reaction that swamps politics.
Whatever the differences were – protection of Taiwan or the Baltics – would pale in comparison to the fact that the United States and Russia were fighting.
Second, while we are talking about limited war, it is a war between thermonuclear powers.
The political focus in an early clash is going to be on “where things might go” if it goes on.
There are many implications of focusing on “one third up the escalation ladder” wars. Attacks are designed more to end the conflict than to destroy enemy forces outright.
A particular area of focus should be exemplary attacks.
Examples include select attack of U.S. ships, Chinese or Russian bases, and command and control.
These are above crisis management as it is usually conceived in the West.
But they are well below total war.
Each side had better think through the dynamics of scenarios in this space.
Deep strike for exemplary attacks, precise targeting, option packages for limited war, and command and control in a degraded environment need to be thought through beforehand.
The Russians have done this, with their escalate to deescalate strategy.
I recently played a war game where Russian exemplary attacks were a turning point, and they were used quite effectively to terminate a conflict on favorable terms.
In East Asia, exemplary attacks are also important as the ability to track US ships increases.
Great power rivalry has returned.
A wider range of possibilities has opened up.
But binary thinking — that strategy is either low intensity or all-out war – has not.
This lesson is too important to learn in the real time pressures of war.
The featured photo shows Russian President Vladimir Putin, center, flanked by Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu, left, and Federal Security Service Chief Alexander Bortnikov, right, arrives on a boat after inspecting battleships during a navy parade marking Victory Day in Sevastopol, Crimea. (AP Photo/Ivan Sekretarev, File) Friday, May 9, 2014,