The Carter Doctrine With the new administration elected in 1977,
President Jimmy Carter signed Presidential Review Memorandum (PRM) 10, which undertook an evaluation of US strategy. The President signed
Presidential Directive (PD) 18 on August 24, 1977, a part of which called for the establishment of a mobile force capable of responding to worldwide contingencies that would not divert forces from the
North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) or
Korea. In 1978, three Army divisions (the
9th,
82nd, and
101st) and one
Marine division were earmarked for such duties. There were however no substantial funds allocated and it remained a paper exercise. There were several reasons why the move to a Rapid Deployment Force did not occur in the 1970s. Unlike previous
Cold War administrations, the US foreign and defense policies under President Carter saw retrenchment, not intervention in foreign affairs. Also, the Carter Administration had
NATO as its focus with conventional force policy as a result of the buildup of
Warsaw Pact forces. Domestically, there were many objections from the Congress and the media with regards to the use of United States military forces in the wake of the Vietnam War. Neither the Army, Air Force, Navy, or Marines were enthusiastic about the establishment of another limited contingency organization. This statement was followed-up in Carter's 1980
State of the Union address when he announced that any attempt by a foreign power to gain control of the Persian Gulf and surrounding area would be regarded as an attack on the vital interests of the United States, and be stopped by all means necessary including the use of military force. This was the first formal commitment of US military power to the region. The RDJTF was planned from the beginning to be highly mobile, its components to be drawn from central pool of resources allocated by the combined services as required to meet mission objectives and the nature of the specific threat to US interests. Initially conceived as a force with a global orientation, the RDF soon focused its attention and planning to the
Persian Gulf region. This narrowing of emphasis was precipitated by the
Soviet invasion of Afghanistan on 26 December 1979 and the subsequent announcement of the
Carter Doctrine which stated that because of its
oil fields, the Persian Gulf area was of
vital interest to the United States, and that any outside attempt to gain control in the area would be "repelled by use of any means necessary, including military force." Thus, the 1980 RDJTF
area of responsibility included
Egypt,
Sudan,
Djibouti,
Ethiopia,
Kenya,
Somalia,
Afghanistan,
Bahrain,
Iran,
Iraq,
Kuwait,
Oman,
Pakistan, the
People's Republic of Yemen,
Qatar,
Saudi Arabia,
United Arab Emirates, and the
Yemen Arab Republic. In the event a conflict had occurred these personnel would have controlled deployment and operations and been augmented by around 200 personnel from REDCOM and another 250 if they were to go to a remote area. The headquarters at
MacDill AFB in
Tampa created some tension between the commands. This command relationship proved unsatisfactory, because in 1980, before the 1986
Goldwater–Nichols Act, there was significant separation within the chain of command of the separate Armed Services and no single channel of communication through which the RDF commander could communicate directly to the
United States Secretary of Defense on matters specifically relating to the RDF. • HQ Commander,
XVIII Airborne Corps,
Fort Bragg, North Carolina. The Commander of the XVIII Airborne Corps was designated as the commander of Army Forces within the Rapid Deployment Joint Task Force and rotated with the other service or assigned as the overall commander depending on mission. All of the following units were permanently assigned under the XVIII Abn Corps, except the 9th Infantry Division, which was assigned under III Corps and was to be attached to XVIII Abn Corps when used as part of the Rapid Deployment Joint Task Force. •
9th Infantry Division, "Old Reliables",
Fort Lewis, Washington : Conceived as a "High Technology Light Division" and/or as a "Motorized Division", which provided the same firepower as a mechanized (heavy) infantry division but with far fewer aircraft sorties needed for deployment. The division emphasized "heavy firepower, long range mobility, interdiction capabilities to the enemy's rear elements ('extended battlefield concept') with light forces and long range weapons, and improved C3 (command, control and communications) and real-time information analysis for effective targeting and weapons utilisation". The division was organized into three brigades of ground troops with a mix of heavy and light battalions, as well as combat support for a total of 14,500 personnel. The fourth brigade was an air attack cavalry brigade with two battalions of
attack helicopters, a
cavalry squadron with two ground and two
air cavalry troops and a
transport helicopter battalion.
Marine Corps elements Designated USMC elements of the force were: •
1st Marine Division,
Camp Pendleton, California : Consisted of 18,000 Marines, its aviation support group, the
3rd Marine Air Wing (159 aircraft), the
1st Force Service Support Group, and 7th Marine Amphibious Brigade (of 11,000 personnel). The Marines provided the RDJTF the capability of projecting
sea power ashore and then conduct land operations. In an
amphibious operation there were three types of units which were available to the RDJTF: :: A
Marine Expeditionary Unit (MEU) [pronounced M-yew] which consisted of a Marine battalion (approximately 2000 men) with a squadron-sized element of various support aircraft being forward deployed to certain areas ::A
Marine Expeditionary Brigade (MEB) which consisted of a regimental landing team (two MEUs), a tank company, artillery battalion, support elements and a Marine Aircraft Group :: A
Marine Expeditionary Force (MEF) which consisted of a Marine division (three MEBs), a tank battalion, artillery regiment, a Light Attack Vehicle battalion, an Amphibious Attack Vehicle battalion, engineer battalion, reconnaissance battalion, and a Marine Aircraft Wing (600 aircraft).
Navy elements Designated United States Navy elements of the force were: • Three
carrier battle groups (one each in the
Indian Ocean,
Mediterranean Sea, and
Pacific Ocean) • A surface action group,
antisubmarine warfare patrol aircraft, the amphibious ships to carry a MEU on station, and the prepositioning ships at
Diego Garcia which by 1982 could provide the supplies to sustain the 7th Marine Amphibious Brigade (7th MAB) for over two weeks and supply several tactical air force squadrons. The Navy's
Military Sealift Command (MSC) would have transported heavy equipment to the area of operations, and to supply the force once deployed. The heavier items of equipment would also have to be transported by sea such as the 100,000 tons of equipment for the 24th Mechanized Division (which would take five weeks by air using every transport available). While bulky items and sheer tonnage are the advantages of sealift, its main disadvantage was speed—as it would take longer to deploy, and be more vulnerable to enemy action.
USAF elements -based C-130E, AF Ser. No. 64-0557, assigned to the
314th Tactical Airlift Wing. Designated United States Air Force elements of the force were from
Tactical Air Command (TAC): •
1st Tactical Fighter Wing,
Langley AFB, Virginia (
F-15 Eagle) •
27th Tactical Fighter Wing,
Cannon AFB, New Mexico (
F-111D) •
49th Tactical Fighter Wing,
Holloman AFB, New Mexico (
F-15 Eagle) •
347th Tactical Fighter Wing,
Moody AFB, Georgia (
F-4E Phantom II) •
354th Tactical Fighter Wing,
Myrtle Beach AFB, South Carolina (
A-10 Thunderbolt II) •
366th Tactical Fighter Wing,
Mountain Home AFB, Idaho, (
F-111F) •
388th Tactical Fighter Wing,
Hill AFB, Utah (
F-16 Fighting Falcon) Additional secondary units consisted of squadrons deployed from the following
USAFE-committed TAC wings: •
31st Tactical Fighter Wing,
Homestead AFB, Florida (F-4E Phantom II) •
4th Tactical Fighter Wing,
Seymour Johnson AFB, North Carolina (F-4E Phantom II) •
23d Tactical Fighter Wing,
England AFB, Louisiana (
A-7D Corsair II) •
363d Tactical Reconnaissance Wing,
Shaw AFB, South Carolina (
RF-4C Phantom II) •
552d Airborne Early Warning and Control Wing,
Tinker AFB, Oklahoma (
E-3A AWACS) •
41st Electronic Combat Squadron,
Davis-Monthan AFB, Arizona, (
EC-130H Compass Call) The Air Force also controlled the
Military Airlift Command (MAC), which put the "Rapid" into the RDJTF. The RDJTF relied upon the
C-5 Galaxy (70 aircraft),
C-141 Starlifter (234 aircraft), and
C-130 Hercules (490) of MAC to deploy the fastest reacting ground forces, the forward elements of the 82d Airborne,
Special Forces and USMC personnel of the 7th MAB. The RDJTF could also call upon the
Civil Reserve Air Fleet (CRAF) of 111 long-range cargo and 231 long-range passenger aircraft.
Air Force Communications Command detailed some
air traffic controllers to be ready to deploy around the world to handle the increased level of Air Traffic.
Formation of United States Central Command On 24 April 1981, Secretary of Defense
Caspar Weinberger announced that the RDJTF would evolve into a separate command with specific geographic responsibilities. The planned change was favorably received in the Congress, though not unanimously. Both the
Senate Committee on Armed Services and the
Senate Committee on Appropriations expressed their concern "about the absence of an organized effort to plan and provide for possible power projection requirements in other Third World areas which are also critical to U.S. interests." The decision to focus the attention of the RDJTF solely on the Middle East and
Central Asia—to the exclusion of other areas, such as
central and
southern Africa—did little to ease this concern. On 1 January 1983 the RDJTF became a separate
Unified Combatant Command known as the
United States Central Command (USCENTCOM). The USCENTCOM commander enjoys the same stature as other theater commanders, and he reports directly to the Secretary of Defense. His operational planning responsibility is limited to the Middle East and Central Asia only. == See also ==