From RAND Policy Currents <[email protected]>
Subject What Can the U.S. Military Learn from the War in Ukraine?
Date February 2, 2023 8:04 PM
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Feb 2, 2023


What Can the U.S. Military Learn from the War in Ukraine?

When other countries fight a war using American military equipment and tactics - as is the case in Ukraine today - policymakers have a window to gain insights into whether U.S. defense investments have paid off.

The United States last had such a window in the 1973 Arab-Israeli War, also known as the Yom Kippur War, when Israel's near-defeat prompted a thorough reexamination of U.S. military weapons and strategy. The Yom Kippur War led to a new doctrine and continues to shape how the U.S. military plans for the future.

According to RAND's Raphael Cohen and Gian Gentile, Russia's war in Ukraine once again poses questions about how the United States prepares for conflict - not only which weapons it buys, but also how it envisions great-power wars in the 21st century. For example, how relevant is the tank? Do helicopters still have a place on the modern battlefield? Will future wars be short, sharp affairs or grinding, protracted struggles?

If the United States does learn the lessons of this war, as it did after the Yom Kippur War 50 years ago, then it may secure the U.S. military's edge for decades to come, Cohen and Gentile say. But if it doesn't, it may not get a second chance.

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