[Senate Hearing 118-615]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]


                                                        S. Hrg. 118-615

                GLOBAL SECURITY CHALLENGES AND STRATEGY

=======================================================================

                                HEARING

                               BEFORE THE

                      COMMITTEE ON ARMED SERVICES
                          UNITED STATES SENATE

                    ONE HUNDRED EIGHTEENTH CONGRESS

                             FIRST SESSION

                               __________

                           FEBRUARY 15, 2023

                               __________

         Printed for the use of the Committee on Armed Services
         
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                 Available via: http://www.govinfo.gov

                                __________

                   U.S. GOVERNMENT PUBLISHING OFFICE                    
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                      COMMITTEE ON ARMED SERVICES

                   JACK REED, Rhode Island, Chairman

JEANNE SHAHEEN, New Hampshire        ROGER F. WICKER, Mississippi
KIRSTEN E. GILLIBRAND, New York      DEB FISCHER, Nebraska
RICHARD BLUMENTHAL, Connecticut      TOM COTTON, Arkansas
MAZIE K. HIRONO, Hawaii              MIKE ROUNDS, South Dakota
TIM KAINE, Virginia                  JONI ERNST, Iowa
ANGUS S. KING, Jr., Maine            DAN SULLIVAN, Alaska
ELIZABETH WARREN, Massachusetts      KEVIN CRAMER, North Dakota
GARY C. PETERS, Michigan             RICK SCOTT, Florida
JOE MANCHIN III, West Virginia       TOMMY TUBERVILLE, Alabama
TAMMY DUCKWORTH, Illinois            MARKWAYNE MULLIN, Oklahoma
JACKY ROSEN, Nevada                  TED BUDD, North Carolina
MARK KELLY, Arizona                  ERIC SCHMITT, Missouri

                   Elizabeth L. King, Staff Director

                 John P. Keast, Minority Staff Director

                                  (ii)


                         C O N T E N T S

_________________________________________________________________

                           February 15, 2023

                                                                   Page

Global Security Challenges and Strategy..........................     1

                           Member Statements

Statement of Senator Jack Reed...................................     1

Statement of Senator Roger Wicker................................     6

                           Witness Statements

Lin, Dr. Bonny, Director, China Power Project and Senior Fellow,      8
  Asian Security, Center for Strategic & International Studies.

Hill, Fiona, Senior Fellow, Center on the United States and          21
  Europe, The Brookings.

Zakheim, Roger, Director, Ronald Reagan Presidential Foundation      27
  and Institute.

                                 (iii)

 
                GLOBAL SECURITY CHALLENGES AND STRATEGY

                              ----------                              


                      WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 2023

                              United States Senate,
                               Committee on Armed Services,
                                                    Washington, DC.
    The Committee met, pursuant to notice, at 9:33 a.m., in 
room G50, Dirksen Senate Office Building, Senator Jack Reed 
(Chairman of the Committee) presiding.
    Committee Members present: Senators Reed, Shaheen, 
Gillibrand, Blumenthal, Hirono, Kaine, King, Warren, Peters, 
Manchin, Duckworth, Rosen, Kelly, Wicker, Fischer, Cotton, 
Rounds, Sullivan, Cramer, Scott, Tuberville, Mullin, Budd, and 
Schmitt.

             OPENING STATEMENT OF SENATOR JACK REED

    Chairman Reed. Let me call the hearing to order. Good 
morning. The Committee meets to discuss the global security 
challenges confronting the United States. Before I introduce 
our witnesses, I would like to welcome the Members of the Armed 
Services Committee to our first public hearing of the 118th 
Congress.
    I am pleased to welcome our new Ranking Member, Senator 
Roger Wicker. He is a tremendous colleague, and I look forward 
to working with him leading this Committee in the bipartisan 
fashion that has been done for many, many years.
    To our returning Members, thank you for your continued 
service and partnership, and to our new Members, Senator 
Mullin, Senator Budd, and Senator Schmitt, welcome. I look 
forward to working with each of you. Okay. Now, I have been 
informed, since we have a quorum, and that is transitory----
    [Laughter.]
    Chairman Reed. Since the quorum is now present, I ask the 
Committee to consider 1,790, Pending Military Nominations. All 
of these nominations have been before the Committee for the 
required length of time. Is there a motion to table report this 
list of 1,790, Pending Military Nominations to the Senate?
    Senator Wicker. So moved.
    Chairman Reed. Is there a second?
    Voice: Second.
    Chairman Reed. Thank you very much. All in favor, say aye.
    [Chorus of ayes.]

    [The list of nominations considered and approved by the 
Committee follows:]

 MILITARY NOMINATIONS PENDING WITH THE SENATE ARMED SERVICES COMMITTEE 
 WHICH ARE PROPOSED FOR THE COMMITTEE'S CONSIDERATION ON FEBRUARY 15, 
                                 2023.
     1.  In the Army there is 1 appointment to the grade of major 
(William T. Johnson) (Reference No. 101)

     2.  In the Army there is 1 appointment to the grade of major (Eric 
J. Kunkle) (Reference No. 102)

     3.  In the Army there is 1 appointment to the grade of major 
(William E. McCarville) (Reference No. 103)

     4.  In the Army there is 1 appointment to the grade of major 
(Leslie A. McCampbell) (Reference No. 104)

     5.  In the Army there is 1 appointment to the grade of major 
(Hardy P. Merrill) (Reference No. 105)

     6.  Col. Leigh A. Swanson, USAF to be brigadier general (Reference 
No. 197)

     7.  MG Sean A. Gainey, USA to be lieutenant general and Commanding 
General, US Army Space and Missile Defense Command/US Army Forces 
Strategic Command (Reference No. 200)

     8.  MG Heidi J. Hoyle, USA to be lieutenant general and Deputy 
Chief of Staff, G-4, US Army (Reference No. 201)

     9.  BG Laurence S. Linton, USAR to be major general (Reference No. 
202)

    10.  In the Army Reserve there are 2 appointments to the grade of 
major general and below (list begins with Stacy M. Babcock) (Reference 
No. 203)

    11.  MG Andrew J. Gebara, USAF to be lieutenant general and Deputy 
Chief of Staff for Strategic Deterrence and Nuclear Integration, 
Headquarters US Air Force (Reference No. 209)

    12.  MG Robert M. Collins, USA to be lieutenant general and 
Military Deputy/Director, Army Acquisition Corps, Office of the 
Assistant Secretary of the Army for Acquisition, Logistics and 
Technology (Reference No. 210)

    13.  In the Air Force there is 1 appointment to the grade of 
colonel (Natalie D. Richardson) (Reference No. 213)

    14.  In the Air Force there is 1 appointment to the grade of major 
(Jonathan M. Bise) (Reference No. 214)

    15.  In the Air Force there is 1 appointment to the grade of 
lieutenant colonel (Nathan K. Aiken) (Reference No. 215)

    16.  In the Air Force there is 1 appointment to the grade of 
lieutenant colonel (Jovon A. Williams) (Reference No. 216)

    17.  In the Air Force there is 1 appointment to the grade of 
lieutenant colonel (Bryan W. Sixkiller) (Reference No. 217)

    18.  In the Air Force there is 1 appointment to the grade of 
colonel (Lacresha A. Merkle) (Reference No. 218)

    19.  In the Air Force there is 1 appointment to the grade of 
lieutenant colonel (Justin T. Schneider) (Reference No. 220)

    20.  In the Army there is 1 appointment to the grade of colonel 
(D011285) (Reference No. 221)

    21.  In the Army there are 2 appointment to the grade of colonel 
and below (list begins with Lajohnne A. Morris) (Reference No. 222)

    22.  In the Army there is 1 appointment to the grade of lieutenant 
colonel (Yuland Tsou) (Reference No. 223)

    23.  In the Army there is 1 appointment to the grade of major 
(Blaire R. Griffin) (Reference No. 224)

    24.  In the Army there is 1 appointment to the grade of major 
(Timothy J. Maki) (Reference No. 225)

    25.  In the Army there is 1 appointment to the grade of colonel 
(Russell W. Vanderlugt) (Reference No. 226)

    26.  In the Army there is 1 appointment to the grade of colonel 
(Brian J. Slotnick) (Reference No. 227)

    27.  In the Army there is 1 appointment to the grade of major 
(Jessica L. Home) (Reference No. 228)

    28.  In the Army there is 1 appointment to the grade of major (John 
R. Taylor) (Reference No. 229)

    29.  In the Army there is 1 appointment to the grade of lieutenant 
colonel (Jason L. Norquist) (Reference No. 230)

    30.  In the Army Reserve there are 7 appointments to the grade of 
colonel (list begins with Queschae B. Blue-Clark) (Reference No. 231)

    31.  In the Army there is 1 appointment to the grade of lieutenant 
colonel (Michael B. Cohen) (Reference No. 232)

    32.  In the Army there is 1 appointment to the grade of lieutenant 
colonel (Irene Garcia) (Reference No. 233)

    33.  In the Army there is 1 appointment to the grade of lieutenant 
colonel (Yong J. Lee) (Reference No. 234)

    34.  In the Army there is 1 appointment to the grade of lieutenant 
colonel (Mahealani N. McFarland) (Reference No. 235)

    35.  In the Army Reserve there is 1 appointment to the grade of 
colonel (Clayton A. Sutton) (Reference No. 236)

    36.  In the Army there are 58 appointments to the grade of 
lieutenant colonel (list begins with Kevin M. Adams) (Reference No. 
237)

    37.  In the Army there are 2 appointments to the grade of major 
(list begins with Christopher M. Kientz) (Reference No. 239)

    38.  In the Army there are 26 appointments to the grade of 
lieutenant colonel (list begins with Adam D. Akers) (Reference No. 240)

    39.  In the Army there are 10 appointments to the grade of colonel 
(list begins with Jesse R. Chapin) (Reference No. 241)

    40.  In the Army there is 1 appointment to the grade of colonel 
(Brendan T. McShea) (Reference No. 242)

    41.  In the Army there is 1 appointment to the grade of lieutenant 
colonel (Matthew R. Burmeister) (Reference No. 243)

    42.  In the Army there is 1 appointment to the grade of colonel 
(Jessica K. Smuth) (Reference No. 244)

    43.  In the Army there are 2 appointments to the grade of major 
(Megan L. Jimenez) (Reference No. 245)

    44.  In the Army there is 1 appointment to the grade of major 
(Brendon M. Esquibel) (Reference No. 246)

    45.  In the Marine Corps Reserve there are 7 appointments to the 
grade of colonel (list begins with Robert J. Bell, Jr.) (Reference No. 
248)

    46.  In the Marine Corps there is 1 appointment to the grade of 
lieutenant colonel (John C. Jarvis) (Reference No. 250)

    47.  In the Marine Corps there are 2 appointments to the grade of 
lieutenant colonel (list begins with Andres J. Agramonte) (Reference 
No. 251)

    48.  In the Marine Corps there are 2 appointments to the grade of 
lieutenant colonel (list begins with Robert A. Lien) (Reference No. 
252)

    49.  In the Marine Corps there are 3 appointments to the grade of 
lieutenant colonel (list begins with Kevin F. Champaigne) (Reference 
No. 253)

    50.  In the Marine Corps there is 1 appointment to the grade of 
lieutenant colonel (Duane A. Gumbs) (Reference No. 254)

    51.  In the Marine Corps there are 2 appointments to the grade of 
lieutenant colonel (list begins with Richard P. Charest) (Reference No. 
255)

    52.  In the Marine Corps there is 1 appointment to the grade of 
lieutenant colonel (Aaron S. Ellis) (Reference No. 256)

    53.  In the Marine Corps there are 4 appointments to the grade of 
lieutenant colonel (list begins with Michael P. Ruegger) (Reference No. 
258)

    54.  In the Marine Corps there are 645 appointments to the grade of 
major (list begins with Patrick J. Abbott) (Reference No. 259)

    55.  In the Marine Corps there are 5 appointments to the grade of 
major (list begins with Adalberto Castro II) (Reference No. 260)

    56.  In the Marine Corps there are 4 appointments to the grade of 
major (list begins with Vincent S. Ginestra) (Reference No. 261)

    57.  In the Marine Corps there are 5 appointments to the grade of 
major (list begins with Jonathan J. Butler) (Reference No. 262)

    58.  In the Marine Corps there are 3 appointments to the grade of 
major (list begins with Dustin A. Hamm) (Reference No. 263)

    59.  In the Marine Corps there are 2 appointments to the grade of 
major (list begins with Scott M. Carter) (Reference No. 264)

    60.  In the Marine Corps there are 3 appointments to the grade of 
major (list begins with Branden D. Palmer) (Reference No. 265)

    61.  In the Marine Corps there are 7 appointments to the grade of 
major (list begins with Joshua Adornorivera) (Reference No. 266)

    62.  In the Marine Corps there is 1 appointment to the grade of 
major (Jeffrey Tang) (Reference No. 267)

    63.  In the Marine Corps there is 1 appointment to the grade of 
major (Robert W. Kreuger III) (Reference No. 268)

    64.  In the Marine Corps there are 3 appointments to the grade of 
major (list begins with David K. Coker) (Reference No. 269)

    65.  In the Marine Corps there are 6 appointments to the grade of 
major (list begins with James D. Ballard, Jr.) (Reference No. 270)

    66.  In the Marine Corps there are 6 appointments to the grade of 
major (list begins with Fadi S. Abdelhalim) (Reference No. 271)

    67.  In the Marine Corps there are 2 appointments to the grade of 
major (list begins with Bradley C. Kirby) (Reference No. 272)

    68.  In the Marine Corps there is 1 appointment to the grade of 
major (William D. Hawkins) (Reference No. 273)

    69.  In the Marine Corps there are 309 appointments to the grade of 
lieutenant colonel (list begins with Joussef J. Abchidonado) (Reference 
No. 274)

    70.  In the Navy there are 2 appointments to the grade of captain 
and below (list begins with Michael Holifield) (Reference No. 275)

    71.  In the Navy there is 1 appointment to the grade of commander 
(Martin L. Leonard) (Reference No. 276)

    72.  In the Navy there is 1 appointment to the grade of captain 
(James E. Hammond) (Reference No. 277)

    73.  In the Navy there is 1 appointment to the grade of captain 
(Mario J. Cardoso) (Reference No. 278)

    74.  In the Navy there is 1 appointment to the grade of lieutenant 
commander (Brett W. Sadowksi) (Reference No. 279)

    75.  In the Navy there is 1 appointment to the grade of lieutenant 
commander (Leland H. Sebring III) (Reference No. 280)

    76.  In the Navy Reserve there is 1 appointment to the grade of 
captain (Beau D. Hufstetler) (Reference No. 281)

    77.  In the Navy there is 1 appointment to the grade of lieutenant 
commander (Kimberly Francis) (Reference No. 282)

    78.  In the Air Force there is 1 appointment to the grade of major 
(Jeffrey S. Clark) (Reference No. 295)

    79.  In the Air Force there is 1 appointment to the grade of major 
(Alicia K. Premo) (Reference No. 296)

    80.  In the Air Force there are 143 appointments to the grade of 
lieutenant colonel (list begins with David A. Alt) (Reference No. 297)

    81.  In the Air Force there are 365 appointments to the grade of 
major (list begins with Brant Adams) (Reference No. 298)

    82.  In the Air Force there are 36 appointments to the grade of 
lieutenant colonel (list begins with Phillip C. Barras) (Reference No. 
299)

    83.  In the Air Force there are 60 appointments to the grade of 
major (list begins with Khashayar Azimi) (Reference No. 300)

    84.  In the Army there is 1 appointment to the grade of major 
(Apoorv Vohra) (Reference No. 301)

    85.  In the Army Reserve there are 2 appointments to the grade of 
colonel (list begins with Christopher W. Swiecki) (Reference No. 302)

    86.  In the Navy there is 1 appointment to the grade of lieutenant 
commander (Wisdom K. Henyo) (Reference No. 303)

_______________________________________________________________________
                                                                    
TOTAL: 1,790

    Chairman Reed. The motion carries. Thank you, and returning 
now to my comments. We are lucky to have our extremely talented 
witnesses with us today. We understand there are significant 
challenges facing us, from China's growing influence, through 
Russia's reckless aggression on issues faces a complex and 
dangerous security environment. Prevailing in this environment 
will require a thoughtful, resolute strategy informed by 
experts like those before us today.
    Dr. Bonny Lin is the Director of the China Power Project 
and Senior Fellow for Asian Security at the Center for 
Strategic and International Studies. She is an expert on United 
States military strategy in the Indo-Pacific, with leadership 
experience across the Department of Defense (DOD) and with the 
RAND Corporation. Dr. Fiona Hill is a Senior Fellow in the 
Center on the United States and Europe at the Brookings 
Institution.
    Dr. Hill has served as a top advisor for European and 
Russian policy on the National Security Council, and is an 
expert on issues related to Russia, Central Asia, energy, and 
strategic competition.
    Mr. Roger Zakheim is the Director of the Ronald Reagan 
Presidential Foundation and Institute. He is an expert on U.S. 
defense strategy, having served as a professional staff member 
on the House Armed Services Committee and other national 
security positions. He currently serves on the 2022 National 
Defense Strategy Commission.
    Our objective today is to examine the national security 
issues that this Committee should consider as we prepare for 
the Fiscal Year 2024 National Defense Authorization Act. As the 
Biden administration's national defense strategy makes clear, 
China is our primary competitor.
    It is the only nation with both the intent and the 
capability to mount a sustained challenge to the security and 
economic interests of the United States, and its allies and 
partners around the world.
    At the same time, Russia remains a violent, destabilizing 
force. Putin's assault on Ukraine has inflicted horrific 
suffering on innocent civilians seeking a free and democratic 
society, it threatens European stability, and harms the global 
economy. In addition, nations like Iran and North Korea 
continue to push the boundaries of military brinksmanship, and 
issues like terrorism and climate change remain persistent. The 
significance of these threats is widely understood.
    The question is how to address them in order to deter or 
mitigate the threat to U.S. national security, and 
international stability more broadly. To begin, we have to 
recognize that America faces an existential struggle between 
democracy and autocracy. Beijing and Moscow seek to change the 
international order by exploiting vulnerable nations through 
coercive economic and military pressure.
    America must offer an alternative to this kind of foreign 
policy. Given the economic, cultural, and geographic ties 
between many of our partners in China, we can't ask them to 
choose between engaging with the United States or China, based 
solely on an economic or military calculation.
    We should use all our tools of statecraft and build 
mutually beneficial relationships. Indeed, forging and 
maintaining strong international partnerships is likely to be 
the decisive factor in any future conflict. We have seen this 
through Ukraine's remarkable performance against Russia, and it 
will hold true also in the Pacific.
    Our greatest comparative advantage over China is our 
network of allies and strengthening that network should be at 
the center of our strategy moving forward. The development of 
the Quad, involving the United States, Japan, India, and 
Australia, presents a valuable framework.
    Similarly, our defense agreement with the Australia and the 
United Kingdom, known as AUKUS [Australia, United Kingdom, 
United States], provides an excellent platform for improving 
the capabilities of our allies and increasing our engagement in 
the region.
    Our adversaries' presence around the globe is evolving. I 
would ask our witnesses to share their assessment of the 
Ukraine conflict in a larger context of the evolving 
international order, as well as the implications for United 
States defense strategy going forward. Similarly, I would like 
to know what military and nonmilitary factors are most likely 
to impact Chinese decisionmaking with respect to potential 
aggression against Taiwan.
    As the Russian shootdown of the Chinese surveillance 
balloon in our airspace should remind us, the top priority of 
the national defense strategy is homeland defense. America's 
skies and seas must be secure to protect its citizens, and the 
Department must pursue technologies that provide forward 
detection to buy decision time for decisionmakers.
    Finally, as we adapt to meet these global challenges, we 
need to consider that we are entering an era of trilateral 
nuclear competition. The cold war was essentially a bilateral 
rivalry between the United States and the Soviet Union, which 
developed deterrence theory and communications methods based on 
two competitors.
    That has changed with the ascendancy of China and its 
growing nuclear arsenal. I would ask our witnesses to help us 
understand this new trilateral dynamic and how it may impact 
efforts to deter the use of nuclear weapons. Ultimately, long 
term strategic competition is not just a rivalry of military or 
economic power, but also a competition of ideas. This requires 
us to develop an understanding of our adversaries' strengths, 
weaknesses, philosophies, and objectives, as well as our own.
    This is where the knowledge and insights of the experts 
before us today are so valuable. I look forward to our 
witnesses' testimony, and I thank them again for their 
participation. Let me now recognize and turn to the Ranking 
Member, Senator Wicker.

               STATEMENT OF SENATOR ROGER WICKER

    Senator Wicker. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I want to 
congratulate you for once again holding the position of chair 
of this important committee. As Ranking Member, I hope to and 
expect to continue the great bipartisanship that has become a 
tradition of this body.
    Also, let's take a moment to salute my predecessor, Hon. 
Jim Inhofe of Oklahoma. He left us Oklahoma sized cowboy boots 
to fill, and we are going to do our best to carry his legacy, 
with a relentless focus on supporting the men and women who 
protect America every day.
    I want to salute and recognize the invaluable contributions 
of our returning Members, and welcome three new Members of our 
Committee, Senator Mullin from Oklahoma, Senator Budd from 
North Carolina, and Senator Schmitt from Missouri. Their states 
play a critical role in defending our Nation.
    Also, there are a number of servicemembers and veterans 
there. Particularly, I would say to Mr. Budd, my first Active 
Duty station as then Captain Wicker was Seymour Johnson Air 
Force Base. So I hope you will look out for my buddies there at 
Seymour Johnson, as well as the entire military.
    Today's hearing is an important opportunity to speak with 
experts, and so we welcome them. Particularly important as we 
begin to craft this year's National Defense Authorization Act, 
hopefully earlier than usual.
    The United States faces an increasingly complex and 
dangerous security environment. Indeed, it is fair to say that 
this is the most dangerous moment since the cold war. The 
Chinese Communist Party is engaged in a massive project of 
military modernization and its threat to unify, as they say, 
and I would say invade, Taiwan becomes clearer every day.
    Nearly 1 year ago, Beijing's junior partner, Russia, 
launched an unprovoked and brutal invasion of Ukraine. This war 
poses a direct threat to peace and prosperity on the European 
continent and to America's vital economic and security 
interests. Moscow's war machine in Ukraine is aided by Iran.
    In addition to supplying Russia with lethal drones, Iran 
continues to spread mayhem elsewhere as it marches closer 
toward a nuclear weapons capability. Iran's volatility and 
malign influence is matched by North Korea. The 38th parallel 
remains one of the most dangerous places in the world.
    Further, we cannot take our eye off the global war on 
terror. Global terrorist organizations continue to recruit, 
train, and operate in the greater Middle East and beyond, and 
pose a direct threat to us here in our Homeland.
    Our first job in this community is to provide the tools our 
military needs to deter and defeat these threats. There is no 
doubt that continued real growth in the defense budget top line 
above inflation, real growth above inflation is an absolute 
necessity, a bare necessity. We are in the crucial years of 
this military competition and we cannot afford to let our guard 
down, Mr. Chairman.
    This Committee led the bipartisan charge to increase the 
defense budget in last year's cycle, a successful effort. I 
hope our witnesses will provide their views on the defense 
budget top line and the need to resource our warfighters, as 
well as initial thoughts on how to tackle the manifold threats 
we face from adversaries abroad.
    The war in Ukraine illustrates the importance of properly 
funding our military. On a bipartisan basis, Congress has 
provided billions of dollars of equipment and munitions to help 
the Ukrainian armed forces defend their country's sovereignty 
and independence.
    Although we have provided considerable resources, I remain 
disappointed that the Administration has been hesitant to 
provide Ukraine with advanced capabilities to secure victory.
    Time and again the Administration's reluctance to provide 
rapid delivery of critical capabilities, stingers, javelins, 
HIMARS, and Abrams, to name a few, has cost the Ukrainians 
valuable time. It has led to the projected battle of attrition 
we may be seeing today.
    So I would ask our witnesses to comment on the war and 
suggest ways that this Committee can continue to help the brave 
and steadfast Ukrainian troops actually win, actually win, 
rather than preserve the stalemate.
    Now, here at home, the war in Ukraine has exposed 
shortcomings in our defense industrial base and supply chains. 
Expanding our lines of production, especially for critical 
munitions, should continue to be a priority this year. I would 
welcome our witnesses' perspective on this issue and how it 
applies to the Taiwan situation.
    The defense industrial base is not only important for 
today's fight in Ukraine but of supreme importance for the 
competition with the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). Both the 
Trump and Biden administrations have placed strategic 
competition with China as the top priority for the national 
defense strategy.
    The previous Republican administration and the current 
Democratic administration are together, have been together on 
this issue. Winning this competition will require a significant 
investment.
    Developing and fielding game changing technologies that 
will keep us a step ahead of Beijing, in addition to developing 
transformational technology, competing--out competing China 
will require increased production of platforms and weapon 
systems such as our battle fleet of ships.
    Congress proved last year that it could take bold steps to 
advantage the United States by passing the CHIPS [Creating 
Helpful Incentives to Produce Semiconductors] and Science Act. 
We would be interested in our witnesses' views on how this 
Committee can help the Department of Defense focus on the long 
term strategic competition with the Chinese Communist Party in 
this respect.
    So I thank our witnesses. I thank the indulgence of my 
friend the chair. I would note that the namesake of Mr. 
Zakheim's Institute of President Reagan, summed up his national 
security policy as peace through strength, and I hope all of my 
colleagues continue to keep that motto in mind as we embark on 
this very important year. Thank you.
    Chairman Reed. Thank you, Senator Wicker. Dr. Lin, please.

 STATEMENT OF DR. BONNY LIN, DIRECTOR, CHINA POWER PROJECT AND 
     SENIOR FELLOW, ASIAN SECURITY, CENTER FOR STRATEGIC & 
                     INTERNATIONAL STUDIES

    Dr. Lin. Thank you, Chairman Reed, Ranking Member Wicker, 
and distinguished Members of the Senate Committee on Armed 
Services. Thank you for the opportunity today to testify at 
this important hearing.
    I will focus on three issues, the nature of the PRC 
[People's Republic of China] challenge, what the United States 
is doing, and how China is responding. The 2022 United States 
National Security Strategy appropriately identifies China as 
the only competitor with both the intent to reshape 
international order, and increasingly, the economic, 
diplomatic, military, and technological power to do it. China 
continues to coerce United States allies and partners.
    China continues to engage in rapid military monitors issue 
of its conventional and nuclear capabilities to become a world 
class military on par with the United States by 2049. On 
critical global challenges such as Russia's invasion of 
Ukraine, China's role remains problematic. The difficulty of 
dealing with China is magnified by Xi Jinping's dismantling of 
collective political leadership and the establishment of 
himself as a sole leader of China.
    With respect to the United States approach to the PRC, the 
Biden administration has identified and made significant 
progress in three areas, invest, align, and compete. First, the 
Biden administration has worked with Congress to invest over $1 
trillion at home to improve U.S. economic innovation and 
competitiveness.
    This includes the 2021 bipartisan infrastructure law, 2022 
CHIPS and Science Act, and the Inflation Reduction Act. Second, 
the United States has trained its unique advantage we have over 
the PRC, our alliances and partnerships.
    For example, Japan now not only shares a common strategic 
vision with the United States but is also committed to do far 
more than its own defense. Australia has agreed to enhance 
force posture cooperation and more United States rotational 
presence.
    The Philippines has provided the United States with access 
to four additional military locations. The United States has 
resumed large scale military drills with South Korea. The Biden 
administration is also facilitating greater cooperation between 
allies and partners.
    This includes the United States, Japan, Australia, a United 
States, Japan, ROK [Republic of Korea] trilateral cooperation, 
AUKUS and the Quad. NATO [North American Treaty Organization] 
is also increasingly engaging with Indo-Pacific countries. 
Third and central to the United States approach to the PRC is a 
need to outcompete China.
    DOD has prioritized PRC as the pacing challenge and Taiwan 
continues as the pacing scenario. The problem in defense is 
improving United States posture and presence, logistics and 
pre-positioned material, and infrastructure throughout the 
Indo-Pacific. The United States is enhancing joint, allied, and 
partner capabilities, increasing training and information 
sharing, and co-developing critical and emerging technologies.
    DOD is also investing in new operational concepts to fight 
in a highly contested environment. The Biden administration has 
made clear that engagement with China is necessary to prevent 
competition from spiraling into conflict. However, United 
States engagement efforts to date are prone to disruption, and 
the PRC continues to stonewall calls for critical dialogs.
    Overall, the United States approach toward the PRC has 
encouraged Beijing to compete more against the United States 
and our allies and partners. The PRC blames the United States 
and our allies and partners for its--what it views as its 
deteriorating security environment and does not view its 
behavior as problematic.
    We have not seen any clear indicators of dampening PRC 
ambitions or activities. There is a real risk that Beijing 
could miscalculate, and intensifying United States-China 
competition could lead to confrontation.
    Moving forward, the United States needs to continue to 
deepen our alliances and partnerships and strengthen this 
critical advantage that we have. The Biden administration also 
needs to bolster its economic strategy toward the PRC.
    If joining the CPTPP [Comprehensive and Progressive 
Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership] is completely off the 
table, the United States should look at other bilateral or 
multilateral arrangements. The United States should also 
continue to work with our coalition of friends to counter PRC 
economic coercion.
    The United States also needs to continue to invest in our 
military to ensure that DOD has the resources needed to train 
and invest in our capabilities to deny PRC aggression, and to 
build a more resilient and dispersed United States posture.
    Finally, the United States needs to maintain high level 
engagements with China and expand people to people contacts. 
Thank you.
    [The prepared statement of Dr. Bonny Lin follows:]
      
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    Chairman Reed. Thank you, Dr. Lin. Dr. Hill, please.

 STATEMENT OF FIONA HILL, SENIOR FELLOW, CENTER ON THE UNITED 
          STATES AND EUROPE, THE BROOKINGS INSTITUTION

    Dr. Hill. Thank you so much, Chairman Reed, and Senator 
Wicker. It is a great honor to be with you, my fellow 
witnesses, the Members of the Committee today.
    Before I begin my opening remarks, I would just like to 
flag that I have a news article in Foreign Affairs with my 
colleague Angela Stent on this very topic, and I would just ask 
that that could be submitted for the record so the Members and 
staff could read it later.
    Chairman Reed. Without objection.
    Dr. Hill. Thank you. I want to focus on one specific 
challenge in my opening remarks and look forward to answering 
the questions that you and Senator Wicker laid out in your 
opening statements.
    But first of all, just as you, Senator Reed, emphasized in 
your introduction, Russia's invasion of Ukraine in February 
2022 was an assault on the post-World War II global order. The 
war in Ukraine has necessitated the third intervention by the 
United States and a European conflict in a little over a 
century, and what will now likely be our third attempt at 
revamping the international security system.
    Now, this world order wasn't just our order, but a set of 
rules that all nations, including Russia and its predecessor, 
the Soviet Union, had agreed to. Russia violated the United 
Nations charter and fundamental principles of international law 
by attacking an independent State that had been recognized by 
all the international community, including Russia itself, for 
more than 30 years.
    So, the current challenge in Europe is how to craft a more 
durable, regional security arrangement that rolls back Russia's 
land grab in Ukraine, is embraced by all Europeans, and sets a 
precedent for reinvigorating the largest set of international 
agreements. We need to find a formula that is not entirely 
dependent on the military and economic power of the United 
States or its political leadership to ensure long term success.
    The European security environment was irrevocably altered 
or ruptured in 2014 when Russia annexed Ukraine's Crimean 
Peninsula and sparked off a brutal conflict and proxy war in 
the Donbas region.
    None of the United States and Europe's mechanisms and 
practices for keeping the peace after World War II and during 
the cold war had much, if any, effect on deterring Russia from 
seizing Crimea in 2014, or attempting to take Kiev and the rest 
of Ukraine in 2022.
    Western deterrence failed in part because American and 
European policymakers never meaningfully emphasized the West's 
red lines. Indeed, one might even ask, what were our red lines? 
Because we certainly did not appear to uphold the post-World 
War II principle of ensuring independent State sovereignty and 
territorial integrity after 2014.
    Instead, European leaders, led by Germany and France, 
rushed to push Russia's annexation of Crimea to one side and 
broker a quick peace settlement in Donbas, the Minsk Accords, 
which would have limited Ukraine's sovereignty if fully 
implemented.
    The tepid Western political response to Russia's violation 
of Ukraine's territory and the limited application of sanctions 
after this first invasion convinced Moscow that attacking 
Ukraine was not, in fact, a serious breach of post-World War II 
norms, and Western commentary since 2014 has more frequently 
focused on the risk of stepping over Russia's red lines rather 
than enforcing the West's.
    We have spent more time contemplating the perils of 
provoking Russia's mercurial President Vladimir Putin, than the 
merits of bolstering Europe's resilience to Putin's coercive 
power.
    In charting a path forward, we need to recognize that the 
war in Ukraine has been brewing for decades because of a key 
distinction in the way that the international community and the 
United States approach the collapse of the Soviet Union and the 
former Yugoslavia in the 1990's.
    In the chaos of Yugoslavia, the country was dissolved 
without the recognition of a single successor State. Serbia's 
territorial claims against all of its members were rejected. In 
the case of the USSR, the United States and every other country 
recognized Russia as the sole successor State.
    Moscow inherited the Soviet Union's United Nation (UN) 
Security Council seat and its other privileges and obligations, 
as well as it seemed, the Soviet Union's cold war sphere of 
influence in Eastern Europe. Ukraine, along with all the other 
former Soviet republics, fell into a gray zone where Russia's 
interests seemed to trump theirs, and they were deemed by all 
of us, Russia's near abroad.
    Vladimir Putin has repeatedly stated that Moscow has the 
right to dominate this neighborhood and claim lost territory. 
For Putin, the war in Ukraine is a continuation of the Soviet 
struggle with the United States to carve up Europe after 1945.
    Russia sees NATO as a United States Cold-War bloc, a cover 
for American imperialism, and not as an alliance of equals to 
ensure common defense and security. So in this context for 
Russia, NATO's post-cold war expansion and Ukraine's reluctance 
to implement the Minsk Accords in Donbas became the current 
war's casus belli.
    So redefining European security and restoring deterrence 
will involve explicitly countering this narrative. Building an 
international coalition against Russia's aggression to 
facilitate the eventual settlement of the war in Ukraine will 
require the same.
    The United States and its allies must clarify and emphasize 
that they are supporting Ukraine on the battlefield to uphold 
the United Nations charter and international law. We need to 
step up our diplomatic efforts, including in the United 
Nations, to convince friends and middle powers in the so-called 
global South that our goal is not to return Western supremacy, 
but to keep the world safer for every nation.
    If Russia succeeds in carving up Ukraine, then the future 
sovereignty and territorial integrity of other states could be 
imperiled, so upholding international norms must once again be 
a central part of our global security strategy. Thank you so 
much for your time.
    [The prepared statement of Dr. Fiona Hill follow:]
      
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    Chairman Reed. Thank you, Dr. Hill. Mr. Zakheim, please.

      STATEMENT OF ROGER ZAKHEIM, DIRECTOR, RONALD REAGAN 
             PRESIDENTIAL FOUNDATION AND INSTITUTE

    Mr. Zakheim. Chairman Reed, Ranking Member Wicker, and 
distinguished Members of the Committee, thank you for inviting 
me to testify today on global security challenges and strategy. 
Less than a year ago, I had the honor of testifying before this 
Committee, when, as many of you will recall, the world 
witnessed Russia's massive military convoy assembled on the 
road to Kiev.
    One year later, that convoy of armor and steel is no more. 
The Russian military failed to seize Kiev, and Ukrainians are 
valiantly fighting to preserve their freedom and sovereignty. 
We have learned a lot in a year, some of which is worth 
reviewing as we consider the State of our national security 
strategy and the efficacy of the national defense strategy.
    First, we have learned that supporting Ukraine with 
military capabilities necessary to defend their sovereign 
territory will not lead to escalation or spillover. Instead, 
Western support has helped transform the battlefield, badly 
damaging Russia's military capabilities, and moderated for now, 
Putin's military objectives.
    Going forward, our support to Ukraine, be it with tanks, 
drones, aircraft or missiles, should be tailored to executing a 
counter offensive strategy that rolls back Russia's gains and 
restores Ukraine's sovereign territory.
    We have also learned that the war in Ukraine has revealed 
how the digital age is leveling the playing field between great 
powers and smaller countries. Ukraine has skillfully deployed 
precision munitions, drone technology, and sophisticated 
encrypted software to gain the upper hand against Russia's 
invading conventional military.
    But while Russia's military conventional force is badly 
damaged, it is not defeated. We stand at the precipice of a new 
stage in the war, where Ukraine will need tanks and other 
conventional offensive platforms in order to dislodge 
entrenched Russian forces.
    Russia's war in Ukraine demonstrates that conventional 
forces still matter. Submarines, tanks, fighting bombers, 
munitions, and end strength cannot be sacrificed in favor of a 
future capability that merely exists on a PowerPoint slide.
    We need to sustain our conventional capability to prevail 
in today's conflicts. Third, industrial capacity may be 
America's Achilles heel as we implement our national defense 
strategy.
    As Ranking Member Wicker pointed out, this is a key area of 
focus for this committee. Just in time manufacturing, which 
products are made only to meet existing immediate demand, may 
make business sense for big box stores and their suppliers, but 
the war in Ukraine makes clear that just in time means out of 
time on the battlefield.
    The effort to deploy, arm, feed, and supply forces is a 
monumental task, and the massive consumption of equipment 
systems, vehicles, and munitions requires a large scale 
industrial base for resupply.
    These takeaways lead to a more general observation that 
realizing the objectives of our national defense strategy 
requires a builders' mindset. Now is a time to build a force 
capable of winning today and tomorrow. The challenge before 
this committee is to ensure the NDS is executed.
    To do so, I recommend the following steps which I outline 
in depth in my written testimony, which I hope is considered 
for the record. Number one, prioritize winning today by 
countering China. number two, investing in winning tomorrow, 
and three, resourcing the demands of the National Defense 
Strategy.
    China's recent brazen breach of United States airspace is 
just the latest case of aggressive and provocative actions by 
the CCP. The primary test of the NDS [National Defense 
Strategy] is whether we are able to deter China from seizing 
control of Taiwan and arrest its pursuit of hegemony in the 
Indo-Pacific.
    Its actions in the Taiwan Strait, combined with its robust 
military modernization program, suggests Beijing is considering 
this sooner rather than later. While we have made and this 
Cmmittee has done a remarkable job of progress in areas of 
warfighting that are relevant to the Taiwan scenario, more is 
needed for other high end munitions relevant in the Western 
Pacific.
    While our force must be capable of deterring adventurism 
and the present competition with China, it must also be 
prepared for a future 21st century conflict. We are far below 
the scale of investment required to replace air, land, and sea 
platforms with AI [artificial intelligence] infused autonomous 
systems.
    In comparison, as this committee knows, China is rapidly 
incorporating the achievements of its commercial sector into 
its military modernization. Not since the Reagan administration 
has our country committed itself to sustained multiyear 
rebuilding of our military. Executing this defense strategy, 
one, as was pointed out, is a line between the Trump and Biden 
administrations.
    It requires a jump from today's spending levels of just 3 
percent GDP [gross domestic product] to what I believe around 5 
percent GDP. As Congress debates how to manage spending amidst 
the debt ceiling negotiations, it should be mindful that 
cutting defense to fiscal year 2022 levels, which would be 
about 10 percent of the top line, would render the defense 
strategy non-executable. It would reduce our military to 
nothing more than a regional force.
    Our defense strategy seeks to preserve American peace and 
prosperity by building and sustaining the U.S. military that 
maintains what President Reagan called the margin of safety. 
Notably, this is not the most ambitious defense strategy. It 
does not seek military dominance everywhere, nor does it call 
for a force capable of winning two conflicts simultaneously.
    Rather, it is a strategy prudently tailored to address the 
security needs of the country, not the political calculus of 
the moment, ensuring no foreign power threatens our interests. 
Thank you.
    [The prepared statement of Mr. Roger Zakheim follows:]
      
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    Chairman Reed. Thank you very much, Mr. Zakheim. Thank you 
to all the witnesses for your excellent testimony. All of your 
written statements will be made part of the record. Without 
objection, thank you. Dr. Hill, President Putin has made 
several speeches over the years where he has made it clear he 
wants to restore the Russian Empire.
    So if he succeeds in the Ukraine, can we have reasonable 
certainty he will continue these efforts in other countries?
    Dr. Hill. Well I think, Senator, that we can. He has 
already made it very clear, as you have discussed, that he is 
interested in acquiring territory in what was the former 
Russian empire.
    As I mentioned in my opening remarks, we recognized Russia 
as the successor State to the Soviet Union, which was itself 
the successors to the Russian Empire. In fact, we incorporated 
many of the territories that were lost after the Russian 
Revolution.
    So Putin has made it very clear, of course, the priorities 
of the Slavic states, Belarus and Ukraine, but also Moldova.
    We have just heard recently in the last few days, I am sure 
people have been reading the press reports that the Moldovan 
Government feels under incredible strain and has been getting 
intel itself that Russia is planning, some kind of aggression 
against them.
    Of course, also Kazakhstan, because northern Kazakhstan was 
settled by Slavs, Ukrainians and Russians, in the Soviet 
period. So all of those countries feel a great deal of anxiety.
    We can also say, of course, that our allies and partners in 
Poland, the Baltic states, which were forcibly taken into the 
Soviet Union during World War II, Finland, which was attacked 
by the Soviet Union 1939, 1940, and other countries in the 
neighborhood feel similarly threatened by this expansionary 
nature of Russian aims.
    Putin has said the world needs to get used to the fact that 
Russia is territory expanding again. In fact, Sergei Lavrov, 
the Foreign Minister of Russia, has demanded that the rest of 
Europe accept these new realities.
    So even if we were to have a settlement based on some kind 
of recognition of the frontier lines that are now holding on 
the front, even a temporary one, we should be very certain that 
Russia, under Putin, and the people around him will look for 
every opportunity to push beyond that at some time in the 
future.
    In fact, that is what we have seen in Ukraine from the 
beginning, 2014 was the beginning of a process, not the end of 
Russia's territorial aims.
    Chairman Reed. Now, you mentioned settlement. Can you give 
us any indication of what it would take to get Putin to sit 
down and have some type of settlement?
    Dr. Hill. Well, right now there is not much indication of 
that, just to be frank. I mean, I think this is a pretty grim 
picture, in part because Putin didn't feel deterred in the 
first place. I think all of us have mentioned here.
    The other thing is that Putin also feels that he has a lot 
of support from the rest of the world, including from China. I 
think it would be very interesting to hear from Dr. Lin about 
really what China's views of this are now.
    Because unfortunately, it may very well take countries like 
China pushing Russia for there to be any break in Putin's 
resolve at this particular moment. It would have to be, I 
think, other countries beyond the United States and its Western 
allies, demonstrating to Putin in some fashion behind the 
scenes or more directly, that this war is not in their 
interests and that they want him to move toward the negotiating 
table.
    Right now, the circumstances on the ground are such that 
Putin really believes that he can push more manpower. This gets 
back to what Mr. Zakheim was already saying about the 
importance of looking at the battlefield. But we need to have a 
diplomatic initiative. We need to get the rest of the 
international community behind us in support of pushing Russia 
back.
    Chairman Reed. Thank you. I always recognize an excellent 
question. So, Dr. Lin, can you comment upon the Chinese 
reaction to Ukraine, and particularly their willingness at some 
point to step up and help contain. I would note that they made 
statements against the use of nuclear weapons, which are 
somewhat encouraging. Dr. Lin.
    Dr. Lin. Sure, thank you. So, Senator Reed, if you recall 
at the very beginning of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, the 
position that China took was, I would say, very, very much pro-
Russia. A 2-day China decision is still that the United States 
and our NATO allies are responsible for Russia's invasion of 
Ukraine.
    What we are seeing is some shift since last year of China's 
position in terms of not fully taking Russia's position 
politically, as China wants to salvage its relationship with 
particularly our European colleagues.
    We are also seeing that there is increasing reporting of 
Chinese support by select smaller Chinese companies, for 
example, providing of surveillance equipment for the Wagner 
Group, as well as Russian operations in Ukraine. We also know 
that China's trade with Russia increased 34 percent last year.
    So as we move forward, I think one thing we need to pay 
attention to is what might push China more in Russia's 
direction. I worry that as China looks at how strong our 
position is with our allies and partners, China may feel it 
needs a stronger partner internationally and doesn't have too 
many options, and Russia is unfortunately one of the partners 
that China is keen to keep.
    Chairman Reed. Doctor Zak--Mr. Zakheim, excuse me, I get 
confused. Can you comment briefly, very brief because my time 
is running out, about this, the issue of the dynamic between 
China and Russia.
    Mr. Zakheim. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I appreciate the 
elevation. You know, we saw that around the Winter Olympics and 
they made this explicit when Putin and Xi met. We are not 
seeing it on the operational side in terms of the military 
support like we are seeing between Iran and Russia.
    But I think, as my colleague pointed out, it is the 
diplomatic support, legitimizing, equivocating in terms of what 
is and is not permissible is where China, I think, is helping 
Russia the most. Legitimizing war crimes would be the first 
example I would point to.
    Chairman Reed. Thank you very much. Senator Wicker, please.
    Senator Wicker. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Zakheim, you 
participated in the current development of the National Defense 
Strategy and the previous National defense strategy. Is that 
correct?
    Mr. Zakheim. I had an opportunity to be on the Defense 
Strategy Commission to review the former one, and we will 
review the present one.
    Senator Wicker. In your testimony, you make a case for real 
growth in the defense budget. That's real purchasing power over 
and above what is being taken out by inflation, and you talk 
about measuring our defense contribution in terms of a 
percentage of the GDP.
    Why is that a good way to measure it? You talked toward the 
end of your testimony, your written testimony, about how we 
could still--we can do that and still achieve some real savings 
and efficiencies.
    Mr. Zakheim. Yes. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. GDP, I think, is 
a good way to look historically of what our country, our Nation 
has devoted to national defense. As you know, we are below 3.5 
percent GDP and declining in the out years.
    Historically, we have been over 10 percent. During the 
Reagan buildup, we were between 5 and 6 percent.
    I think the combination terms of where our military is 
today, and that is a force that hasn't actually been modernized 
since the Reagan buildup for a variety of reasons, either peace 
dividends or what we have spent on armed conflict, plus 
inflationary challenges, plus the national environment, which 
my colleagues have outlined in their testimony, requires doing 
this.
    I think there are three fundamental pieces here that are 
required. I think of it as winning today, which is taking our 
conventional force and upgrading it. I think it is leveraging 
the technologies that will transform our military, that China 
is doing as well.
    That requires a whole new suite of investments led by 
autonomy in every domain of warfare, and the third, as you have 
pointed out and lead on, Senator Wicker, industrial capacity. 
The reality that we have seen from Ukraine, it will play out. 
We are seeing it right now in terms of backlog in supporting 
Taiwan.
    What we need for our own national defense, we just don't 
have the industrial capacity to keep up. If you add all three 
of them, Chairman, Ranking Member I wouldn't disagree with you, 
but I am not sure 5 percent real growth is enough to get there. 
What I am trying to get to is what the national defense 
strategy actually calls for.
    This is what the defense strategy says it seeks to do in 
terms of leading in three regions of the world, being able to 
compete today, and to prevail one conflict, while holding 
another adversary preventing a second conflict. To do all that 
requires a force that we simply don't have today and 
capabilities we don't have enough of today.
    Senator Wicker. Well, that is a very important statement 
you just made. So it really, in terms of what we need, we need 
to quantify exactly what we need to buy in the near and 
foreseeable future, and that might be more than 5 percent.
    Mr. Zakheim. I believe so. Ranking Member Wicker and 
Chairman Reed, I think this Committee, what you have done in 
terms of adding to the defense request has gone a long way. I 
know it is hard to do, but I don't believe it is insufficient.
    Senator Wicker. Dr. Hill, what about that?
    Dr. Hill. Well, I--obviously planning ahead and trying to 
foresee where we might end up is pretty difficult, given as Mr. 
Zakheim is talking about, the capacity issues that have been 
revealed by the war in Ukraine. I mean, right now, 
unfortunately, it is very hard to say how long this is going to 
continue.
    But I think one thing that we do have to factor in here is, 
you know, sadly listening to Dr. Lin, it seems more and more 
likely that China and Russia will find their interests 
converging, as they already have up until this date. But we 
might be actually dealing with problems on two fronts for a 
long time to come.
    I think, you know, something to add to what Dr. Lin said is 
China has no interest in Russia losing in this war, and in 
fact, might in fact have a vested interest in this war going on 
in Ukraine as long as possible, because, of course, it does 
take up a large amount of equipment and armaments, particularly 
ammunition, as we now know, and the increasing demands from 
Ukraine, which are tied very much to the battlefield, for other 
equipment.
    We have seen our other allies from Europe, not just NATO 
countries but others, stepping up to assist Ukraine here too. 
So there is a question about their production capacity. I think 
that we should factor in as well what the European militaries 
are going to require, too, because they are also dependent on 
our production.
    Senator Wicker. Do you agree that the Russian offensive 
seems to have stalled? If there were a successful counter 
offensive by Ukraine in the next 2 to 3 months, China would pay 
attention to that and perhaps alter their ambitions.
    Dr. Hill. It is possible. I think, again, we know that it 
is extraordinarily difficult now for the Ukrainians to dislodge 
the Russians from certain positions. They have dug in very 
heavily in Zaporizhzhia and Kherson.
    We are seeing this World War I like fighting on the front 
line in the Donbass region. I think all of us are looking at 
this, not just military experts, but others see that this is 
going to be quite a grind.
    I think China obviously is watching this very closely. The 
situation in Taiwan is quite difficult. This is a maritime 
challenge, not one of land warfare. Actually, one thing to bear 
in mind is the Russian navy has not really been affected by 
this. We are seeing these joint naval exercises with South 
Africa.
    That is why I mentioned the importance of getting two 
middle powers and other friends in the global South with China 
and Russia that might show different kinds of offensives or 
actions that Russia could take to distract us from what is 
happening in Ukraine.
    As I said, this is extraordinary difficult situation that 
we are in, but I think we would make a mistake if we think if 
China and what Russia is doing as two separate things. I think 
right now they are melded together and we have to have a 360 
degree perspective around this, including what our other allies 
and partners can bring to the table.
    Senator Wicker. Thank you, and thank you, Mr. Chairman.
    Chairman Reed. Thank you, Senator Wicker. Senator 
Gillibrand, please.
    Senator Gillibrand. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and thank you 
all for your testimony. I want to drill down on this 
convergence of China, Russia, Iran, and the concerns that you 
have all expressed about how these world powers are aligning.
    China has been projecting power in many ways for a long 
time the last 10 or 15 years. Their doubling of their military 
budget, their investment in Belt and Road initiative to create 
bases, create opportunities worldwide to project their power.
    Russia has been projecting its power through an invasion of 
Ukraine. What they are doing in Moldova right now. A constant 
push of their power. Iran has been projecting its power through 
conflict, through the use of proxies, through constant malign 
activities. So I would like your recommendations on the best 
way to try to create a deterrence, a stronger deterrence 
against conflict.
    Ways to establish the future or path to peace with all of 
these different regions. Specifically with addressing China, 
Dr. Lin, you talked about building up our allies, our partners 
to maximize our deterrence capabilities and demonstrate a 
united front in the region. I would love some more specific 
ideas about how best to do that, whether that means basing 
agreements for deployments, whether that means any other 
alignment that you think is useful as a way to promote 
deterrence.
    I would also like to hear about ways that we may be able to 
deter Iran and Russia. One of the ideas I would like your 
thoughts on is the Abraham Accords, specifically as a way to 
create a regional alliance across the Middle East against Iran, 
to counter Iran, and also to push those Middle East countries 
from aligning with China.
    Because when we are absent, the gap is filled and we don't 
want that gap being filled by China. Many of our allies, that 
gap was filled by Russia. Russia gives them their weapons. 
Russia makes different kinds of investments, and when we don't 
participate in these international agreements and 
collaborations, the gap is filled by, unfortunately, others who 
do not align with our interests or values.
    So I would like your thoughts on each of these questions, 
and your best recommendations for how do we create long term 
alignments for peace? How do we deter conflict, especially with 
China, and especially with Iran in the future?
    Dr. Lin. Thank you, Senator. I can take a quick stab at the 
range of questions, excellent questions that you had. You 
mentioned the China, Russia, Iran alignment. I would just note 
that the stronger of them is between China and Russia, whereas 
the China, Iran one is one that is still growing.
    If you look today, the Iranian President is actually in 
China meeting with Xi Jinping. One of the reasons why he is 
there is because of the fact that he wants to make sure that 
China can move as fast as possible on the major agreements that 
were signed last year.
    He also recognizes that China is trying to do somewhat of a 
balancing act in the Middle East with the fact that China is 
heavily dependent on oil from Saudi Arabia and also recently 
signed major agreements with the Gulf Cooperation Council.
    So I would just note that the China, Iran relation is one 
to watch, but I don't think it is, from China's view, as 
strategically important as Russia right now, given the fact 
that Russia is significantly much more powerful than Iran, and 
also besides that Russia is China's neighbor.
    In terms of what the United States can do to further 
bolster our alliances and partnerships, what we already--we 
already have many developments underway. A couple that I will 
highlight that I think are worth very much following up on is 
recently we saw the greater alignment between NATO and four 
East Asian countries, South Korea, Japan, Australia, New 
Zealand.
    My understanding is NATO seeks to normalize that. We should 
try to support that as much as possible, increasing, as Dr. 
Hill mentioned, increasing the linkages between our European 
allies and partners, and our critical allies in the Indo-
Pacific.
    I would also note there has been consideration of whether 
Japan might join AUKUS. All of these developments that we 
already have underway we should continue. For example, United 
States, Japan, Australia, trilateral, the United States, ROK, 
Japan trilateral. All of these are incredibly important in 
terms of our positioning in the Indo-Pacific. Thank you.
    Dr. Hill. I would like to agree with what my colleague, Dr. 
Lin, has just said about the importance of creating all the 
linkages with the various alliance structures and partnerships 
that we already have.
    One of the things that I probably should have mentioned 
before about Russia's aims throughout this war and Ukraine is 
to begin to create new alliances for Russia as well.
    As Dr. Lin pointed out, Russia is one of the few close 
partners of China at this point, but that is the same for 
Russia. Although Russia has emphasized a great deal in terms of 
partnership building in Middle East, for example, in other 
parts of East Asia, and Latin and South America, trying to 
revitalize old Soviet ties, the close relationship between 
Russia and Iran has been a problem there.
    Senator, as you pointed out with the Abraham Accords, one 
of the main factors for those Accords was, of course, 
opposition to Iran and Iran's role in the region. If Russia 
remains the only power that has relations with Iran, that will 
actually become a problem in its other relationships over time, 
including with Israel and some of its other close partners, the 
UAE, for example.
    So I think we do absolutely have to find ways in which we 
can work with these sort of middle powers, and others that, so 
far are trying to sit on the fence and watch us from a distance 
because they frankly don't want to choose sides.
    India is one of those countries that has a crisis at the 
moment because India's relationships with Russia were an 
important counterpart for India against China. Of course, the 
closer the China and Russia pull together, the more untenable 
India's own security position becomes.
    We should also pay attention to the so-called BRICS, 
Brazil, Russia and India. I have already said China and South 
Africa. I mentioned already this, but the new naval exercises 
that South Africa and Russia and China are conducting, I mean, 
we should make it very clear to South Africa that that is just 
not acceptable.
    Other countries should be doing that, too. It shouldn't 
just be the United States stepping out there. We have just had 
President Biden visiting with President Lula in Brazil. Brazil 
is eager to take a larger international role.
    We should try to capitalize upon that. We need to really 
think about how we can reinvigorate our own relationships with 
middle powers on countries in all of the key areas of Asia, 
Latin and South America, and Africa.
    That should be part of our strategy, and one area in which 
we could focus on this. It is not perhaps in the mandate of 
this particular committee, but is focusing on the combination 
of fuel, food, and fertilizer.
    Because one of the key things that we have seen as a result 
of this war in Ukraine is how important Ukraine, Russia, 
Kazakhstan, the Black Sea area for global food supplies, 
fertilizer, which is, of course, tied together, and also flows 
of fuel.
    This is where we really have a lot of leverage with other 
powers, because they have been dependent on all of those flows 
and have been very concerned about the impact of this war. This 
also includes China, which was a major investor in Ukraine 
prior to the outbreak of war, particularly in the agricultural 
sector.
    So there may be something there that we can look up as a 
recommendation for emphasizing in our outreach.
    Chairman Reed. Thank you, Senator Gillibrand. Mr. Zakheim, 
for the record, you can submit something, if you would. Thank 
you. Senator Fischer, please.
    Senator Fischer. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Zakheim, what 
do you see as being the primary lessons learned from the war in 
Ukraine thus far?
    Mr. Zakheim. The number one lesson is that we are--should 
stand and we will advance our interests by standing with 
Ukraine. That aggression needs to be countered, and if we do 
so, that is not going to be escalatory, but in fact, 
stabilizing.
    I think the best thing we can do for our national interests 
is to see Russia defeated in Ukraine. This Committee and this 
Congress has done a lot to support Ukraine in realizing that.
    I think we have to start measuring our support for Ukraine 
by the particular weapons platform that is on the table and 
think more broadly and strategically, what is our aim, what is 
our goal?
    The goal is to roll back Russia, to support Ukraine in 
their counter-offensive, and we should be supporting them with 
the necessary munitions and platforms to realize that 
objective.
    That will return security and stability to Europe and deter 
Vladimir Putin. He has never been deterred because he has never 
had to deal with a counter to his aggression. We have talked 
about 2014 Crimea.
    As the Senator knows, start in 2008 with Georgia. This is 
the first time we have had the counter, and we need to pull it, 
and support it through to the end.
    Senator Fischer. One thing that I have been focused on from 
the very beginning is our munitions capacity, and the 
production that we see, when you say--I thought you kind of 
glossed over that on your answer, and I think there is a real 
and urgent need to expand munition production capacity as 
quickly as possible, not just to address the ongoing war that 
we see in Ukraine.
    What additional steps do you think you would recommend to 
Congress to consider to overcome our current limitations that 
we have on that capacity?
    Mr. Zakheim. Well, Senator, I agree with you and did not 
mean to gloss it over. In fact, I share your view that this is 
an urgent problem. It is an urgent problem in Ukraine. It is an 
urgent problem in Taiwan.
    Many of those munitions and capabilities, we now need in 
those two theaters, but we also need here at home. As you are 
fully aware, we don't have that capacity, both in terms of what 
we need for current scenario planning and also for surge 
capacity.
    I think this Committee started it in this past year's 
National Defense Authorization Bill, but it is limited. Most 
important thing this Congress could do, and I know I am 
preaching to the converted here in authorizing committee, but 
multiyear procurement. I think you saw a lot of this.
    If you are able to buy things over the course of three or 4 
years, you would make it cheaper. You know, that is an 
efficiency that I know Senator Wicker is focused on, other 
Members of this Committee.
    But at scale, an industrial capacity, this is capital 
intensive investments, not just to get the particular 
ammunition that can be produced on the curved production line, 
but it is multiple production line. Senator, as you know, it is 
not just about munitions.
    The most important capability for a Taiwan scenario, and I 
assume Dr. Lin would agree, is our undersea capability. We are 
retiring our undersea capability at a faster rate than we are 
producing them. That, in its essence, is a capital problem, 
focused, you know, around industrial capacity, Senator.
    Senator Fischer. I agree with you, and that was the reason 
that I was able to get the amendment in the NDAA, to address 
that problem specifically.
    On this Committee, and this for all of our panelists, on 
this committee we have been debating and changing security 
dynamics, in particular the return of great power competition.
    What do you see as being implications that we have for our 
military in that regard, and how do you think the events that 
we have seen play out over the past year may have changed your 
view of that discussion? Dr. Lin, would you like to start?
    Dr. Lin. Thank you. So in terms of great power competition 
and looking at the China dynamic, I think if I could add really 
quickly to what China is learning from Ukraine, I think what 
China is seeing is how long a war can occur.
    Related to the Taiwan scenario, and what the United States 
needs to do, is we need to make sure that we are not expending 
all of our ammunition, that is within a very short period of 
time.
    Recently CSIS [Center for Strategic and International 
Studies] did extensive war gaming, and we found, given our 
current stocks, they would run out within 2 weeks. If we are 
expecting a Taiwan conflict to last more than that, we 
definitely need to buildup our defense industrial base, as well 
as both the surge capacity, as well as the capacity to be able 
to have more of these stocks pre-positioned in the region.
    In terms of great power competition, what I am seeing from 
China's end, particularly after Speaker Pelosi's visit to 
Taiwan last August, is a greater willingness on China's end to 
use limited demonstration of military force to express its 
displeasure.
    What it is taking way from Russia's invasion of Ukraine and 
why it thinks Russia needed to invade Ukraine was that it saw 
that Russian efforts at diplomacy with our NATO allies and with 
the United States failed.
    If you don't believe that diplomacy can allow you to 
achieve your aims, then you have to think about a greater use 
of military force, including demonstrations of force, at 
smaller scale.
    Senator Fischer. Thank you. Dr. Hill.
    Dr. Hill. Thank you so much, Senator Fischer. Again, I 
concur with my colleagues here on the panel. Actually, I want 
to pick up on something that Mr. Zakheim absolutely was right 
in emphasizing, but in fact, all of this started in 2008 with 
Russia's move into Georgia.
    In fact, we have had 15 years of this phase of great power 
competition, if that is how we want to call it, that we should 
have been paying closer attention to. We thought that was an 
aberration.
    It turned out not to be. What we have to recognize here is 
obviously we are in a very different competition, if that is 
what we want to call it, from Russia and China. Russia has been 
in the process of revanchism and revisionism, trying to 
overturn a territorial order in Europe.
    Of course, Russia--China is similarly engaged with Taiwan, 
who is obviously of a different nature, but also territorial 
claims against many of its neighbors, Japan, Vietnam, and 
others in the South China Seas. The United States is not in 
that position of territorial acquisition.
    Again, I think part of the message that we have to get 
across all the time, notwithstanding all the accusations that 
we have from previous U.S. actions and at different times in 
our history, is that we are actually trying to maintain the 
current international order, which means the territorial 
integrity of all of the recognized states. That is different.
    That should enable us to build a coalition of other 
countries, including middle powers, to push back against the 
actions of China and Russia, and specifically of Russia at this 
juncture, but China over the future.
    So we all have to focus on how when we are answering these 
questions, we are going to work with our allies in all of these 
different alignments that we have already talked about, in 
NATO, with all AUKUS, expanding that out, and also trying to 
push, as I mentioned before, countries like South Africa away 
from contemplating the kind of activities that they are now 
engaging in.
    Chairman Reed. Thank you, Senator. Senator Shaheen, please. 
Thank you, Senator Fischer.
    Senator Shaheen. Thank you, and thank you to each of you 
for being here today. Mr. Zakheim, I couldn't agree more about 
multiyear procurement. It would also help if people could count 
on our getting a budget done every year. That would be a good 
first start, so I hope all of us on this committee will take 
that to heart.
    Ms. Hill, or Dr. Hill, Belarus has seemingly been reluctant 
to embrace Putin's war in Ukraine, but Russia continues to use 
the territory in Belarus to stage its an invasion.
    Can you briefly tell me how Putin views his relationship 
with Lukashenko, and whether we expect Belarus to engage to a 
greater level in the war in Ukraine in the future?
    Dr. Hill. Thank you, Senator Shaheen. It is actually very 
important for us to remember Belarus, because it still is 
technically an independent country, but as you were mentioning, 
it has been used as a staging ground for this conflict by 
Ukraine--for Ukraine by Russia.
    We also know, of course, that President Lukashenko of 
Belarus has been in some political difficulty in the most 
recent elections, and there is a lot of questions about whether 
he was, in fact, actually elected.
    We had a large opposition movement that emerged, and this 
will continue to be questions about his long-term grip on 
power. What we do know, of course, is that he has become 
increasingly dependent for political and economic support for 
Russia, which is why Belarussian sovereignty is now being used.
    I think Russia was also a model for what Putin wanted to 
achieve in Ukraine and still remain so. You know, we have 
probably forgotten that several decades ago, Belarus and Russia 
entered into a union State.
    Nobody quite knew what that meant, but it was obviously one 
in which Russia dominates all of Belarus's security policy and 
politics and economics. That was clearly what Putin wanted with 
Ukraine after the initial phases of the invasion.
    He wanted to do the same thing. So I think that we need to 
focus on Belarus and thinking forward as well.
    Senator Shaheen. Excuse me for interrupting, but so do we 
think Lukashenko is going to bow to Putin's getting the country 
further engaged in the war in Ukraine?
    Dr. Hill. I think he has limits to what he can actually do. 
He is dependent on Putin for propping him up on the one hand, 
but on the other, he has such a level of opposition. We are 
seeing Belarusians fighting for Ukrainians.
    We have got a lot of Belarussian opposition in the Baltic 
states, in Poland and elsewhere. I think Lukashenko knows that 
if he used the country, or let the country be used as a 
platform for yet another set of invasions of Ukraine and 
actually then committed Belarusian forces, that he would face 
severe problems at home.
    I think all the signs are that he is trying to shift his 
way toward the exit. I mean, he is been flashing sort of 
signals behind the scenes that he would like to do something 
different. The challenge is trying to figure out how to 
facilitate that under the current circumstances.
    Senator Shaheen. Thank you. Given the turmoil in the world 
right now, are there opportunities that we should be trying to 
take advantage of?
    Obviously, in Syria, for example, the devastation of the 
earthquake has finally allowed or forced Assad to open up some 
more avenues into the country for humanitarian aid.
    You talk, I think, Dr. Lin and Dr. Hill, each of you talked 
a little bit about the opportunities with some of our Asian 
partners to get closer together to address China. But are there 
other opportunities that we ought to be looking at in this 
turmoil and trying to take advantage of?
    Dr. Hill. I will just say very quickly, in addition to 
those that you have outlined, because I think those are genuine 
opportunities, that we should also take a much harder look at 
all of the web of our relationships in the Western Hemisphere, 
for example.
    One of the issues that we discovered under the last 
Administration when we had the crisis in Venezuela was that 
regional countries were not well-disposed toward the United 
States, in part because we failed to have a coherent policy 
toward our neighbors in Latin and South America.
    We focused on problems rather than how we can build those 
relationships up. I think with the shift to President Lula in 
Brazil, this provides more of an opportunity because he is 
traditionally been much more interested in international 
affairs.
    We also have opportunities in Mexico and in other countries 
to try to work with them looking forward. Our big problem is 
that 87 countries around the world, including many of our 
neighbors in Latin and South America still tend to have visa 
free regimes with Russia.
    They are looking toward Russia and China for investment and 
sometimes assistance. We could work on that front as well. 
Thank you. Mr. Zakheim.
    Mr. Zakheim. Senator, I just would add that, and I know you 
do a lot of work on this, allies. I mean, there is no better 
way, in order to engage allies and allies more willing to work 
with us, than when you have revanchist powers invading other 
countries. They are playing out in terms of what the CCP is 
doing.
    Certainly with Russia, you see Finland and Sweden, and then 
of course, as was mentioned, what the opportunities we have in 
the Indo-Pacific. I would add that we need to give these are 
more meat.
    You know, the AUKUS framework is a great example, but other 
types, particularly industrial cooperation, how we deal with 
supply chain challenges in terms of impacts to the military, we 
are not making these alliances and relationships meaningful 
enough for the current security environment.
    Senator Shaheen. Thank you. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
    Chairman Reed. Thank you, Senator Shaheen. Senator Rounds, 
please.
    Senator Rounds. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Thank you to all 
of you for taking the time to visit with us today. My question 
will focus specifically on NATO and our obligations under 
Article 5, and the impact that we could see should we have to 
respond.
    Assuming the possibility exists that a belligerent Putin 
attack or at least he has interest in perhaps expanding out of 
Ukraine and into one of our other allied countries that are 
part of NATO, what would be the probability, in your 
estimation, that we would also find ourselves not only legally 
obligated to respond in that area, but just very briefly, what 
do you believe the probability is of us having to also respond 
in short order to another conflict area regarding China?
    Just the probability, and I am just going to do right down 
the line. Dr. Lin.
    Dr. Lin. Thank you. So I think the possibility of a large 
scale conflict, two simultaneous, large scale conflicts are 
relatively low right now, mainly because we are not seeing 
clear signs yet that China coordinates its plans for Taiwan on 
what Russia is doing in Ukraine.
    Because if we did see that, we would have seen significant 
more use of force by China against Taiwan in the past year or 
so.
    Senator Rounds. Thank you. Dr. Hill.
    Dr. Hill. I think in addition to what Dr. Lin has said 
within the NATO realm in Europe, we are actually seeing Russia 
being quite cautious. Notwithstanding the brutality on the 
ground in Ukraine, we haven't yet seen some of the things that 
people were worried about in terms of talks of convoys going in 
to Ukraine from NATO countries. There were reports, of course, 
of missiles from the Black Sea going over potentially to--
Moldova.
    Senator Rounds. But my question is, should we have to 
respond under Article 5. Assuming we had to respond under 
Article 5, what is the probability of having a second front 
open up? What would be that probability on the other side of 
the world?
    Dr. Hill. On the other side of the world, as I think Dr. 
Lin has said, I think that is quite low. I think in Europe what 
we are seeing is Russia is more likely to keep on trying with 
cyber, political, and economic intrusions than more military 
expansion because of Russia's own concerns about having to 
respond to too many fronts at the same time.
    Senator Rounds. Thank you.
    Dr. Lin. If I could add quickly, I meant to say it is low 
now, but it would be increasing over time.
    Senator Rounds. As we get closer to perhaps the 2027 
timeframe.
    Dr. Lin. But also as the United States-China competition 
intensifies, as China will be thinking, well, what are the best 
ways--if we need to use force, they will be thinking if the 
United States is distracted, it is a better opportunity for us 
to use force.
    Senator Rounds. Thank you.
    Mr. Zakheim. Senator Rounds, I am a little less sanguine 
than my colleagues here. This scenario that you have raised, 
the simultaneity problem is one that our defense strategy 
struggles with. As you know, we shifted away from building a 
force that could deal with two major regional contingencies.
    What that did, as you know, raised the salience of nuclear 
weapons, a dangerous scenario. But that is what our approach 
is. If we are in one fight, the way we are going to hold off 
the other fight for the most part is rely on allies and rely on 
our nuclear deterrent. That is a place we don't want to be.
    So winning in Ukraine is key here because it pins down 
Vladimir Putin, weakens his military, and reduces the 
likelihood we face the same simultaneity problem, which you 
have raised here.
    But I am not sanguine. I think what we saw in the Winter 
Olympics, and this China, Russia axis presents the very problem 
that you are thinking about.
    Senator Rounds. Following up on that, should we find 
ourselves in that type of a position, and we would be required 
to--I have always said, look, nobody wants to use nuclear 
weapons, but the best way not to have to use nuclear weapons is 
to be just overwhelming in our capabilities.
    We are currently in the middle of upgrading our NC3. What 
would be, Dr. Zakheim, what would be your opinion as to our 
process in the upgrading, and what should we be working on or 
focused on right now with regard to our nuclear capabilities on 
the triad?
    Mr. Zakheim. Well, I think this Committee has done a great 
job of modernizing the triad. Of course, it is not happening 
fast enough, and you know that, the Committee gets the 
briefings on it.
    I thought the Nuclear Posture Review was good. It certainly 
didn't change the doctrine. But we are still stuck at the 
strategic level. As you know, Senator, the Chinese and the 
Russians are modernizing not only at the strategic level, but 
also kind of at theater level, intermediate level, tactical 
weapons, and we are behind there.
    I think what that does is introduce the possibility and 
elicits a form of escalation that none of us would ever want.
    Senator Rounds. Thank you. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I am up 
against my time limit.
    Chairman Reed. Thank you very much, Senator Rounds. Senator 
Hirono, please.
    Senator Hirono. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and I thank all of 
the panelists. Clearly, there are many demands on our 
resources. That is an understatement. I would consider a 
foundational concern to be the need to invest in our 
infrastructure, which is not only a matter of geopolitical 
competition, but also the readiness of the force--the forces.
    As chair of the subcommittee on Readiness, improving our 
military's readiness is a top priority. In the last year, let 
me give you some examples, there have been numerous issues with 
the military's infrastructure in Hawaii, from water main breaks 
to toxic chemical leaks and spills endangering our groundwater.
    I know that these kinds of events are not particular to 
Hawaii, even across the country. We need to better maintain and 
modernize our DOD infrastructure to take care of our people, 
get our systems out of maintenance on time, and be able to 
support national security.
    I will start with Dr. Lin. It is clear that INDOPACOM, AOR 
infrastructure needs to be modernized. Can you elaborate on the 
importance of our infrastructure for our national security, 
especially in the Pacific?
    Dr. Lin. So our infrastructure in the Indo-Pacific, 
particularly the fact that we are now investing in much more 
resilient and dispersed basing is absolutely critical, 
particularly as we look at the range of missiles, the hundreds.
    I think right now is based on what DOD release last year. 
The range of the missiles that China has in its vicity is 
clearly around 2,000 or so. The range of missiles that China 
can bring to bear means that in any fight, whether it is over 
Taiwan, we will need to be able to be able to disperse our 
assets so we are not reliant on any particular base.
    In order to be able to maintain that we can function for in 
particular airfields, we need harden our infrastructure. We 
also need to work with our allies and partners to make sure 
that we have the capabilities to quickly repair, for example, 
runways and other facilities. So it is absolutely critical to 
the fight.
    Senator Hirono. We basically, from what I can see, and 
especially with the examples of what is happening in Hawaii, we 
have aging infrastructure, which we tend to ignore until 
something breaks, and then you have Tripler Hospital, which is 
the main military hospital, not have water or not have 
electricity. We can't have that and maintain readiness.
    So I hope the other two panelists agree that even as we 
need to pay attention to other aspects of keeping our military 
ready, that let's not forget about some of these foundational 
concerns. I want to get to again, Dr. Lin, a key foundation of 
our national defense strategy is integrated deterrence, which 
highlights the need to work cooperatively with our allies.
    A number of you have already emphasized how important it is 
to strengthen our allies and partners, to strengthen our 
economic, cultural, and defense relationships. It is all of a 
piece because we can't just focus on the mil to mil 
relationships.
    We can deter aggression in the Pacific, for example, with 
our network of allies and partners, including increased posture 
forward and greater opportunities to conduct training in the 
region.
    Dr. Lin, between the recently announced access agreements 
with the Philippines, the United States basing the historic 
AUKUS agreement to share nuclear propulsion information and 
work on emerging technologies, and the current renegotiation of 
the compacts of freely associated states, the Administration is 
taking large steps forward and strengthening our relationships 
in the important Indo-Pacific region. What kind of message do 
these steps send to both China and our regional partners?
    Dr. Lin. Thank you. So our efforts to strengthen relations, 
whether it is on the defense front or on the political front, 
it sends a message of reassurance to our allies and partners 
that are looking to us to help them, to help deter Chinese 
coercion and deter Chinese aggression.
    What I would note is China is watching these efforts very, 
very closely. While it does have a deterrent effort, it is also 
causing China to think, well, how do we counter this?
    As China looks at this, what China is looking for is what 
they find as the weakest link among our allies and partners, 
and also they probably also have in their mind thinking, well, 
do we also need the same sort of partnerships and alliances?
    That is where, again, returning back to the China-Russia 
relationship. As China is watching what we are doing with our 
allies and partners, it must be in Beijing thinking, well, we 
need to definitely have our own partnerships and Russia is 
definitely one of them that China needs to keep.
    Senator Hirono. So how important is our relationship with 
the Pacific Island nations, i.e. our compact partners?
    Dr. Lin. Senator, absolutely important, because, as you 
know, China is trying to increase its military presence there. 
As the PLA becomes more or more active, it is now venturing 
much more beyond the first island chain into the second island 
chain.
    So if we are able to deny China a military base within the 
second island chain area, that would allow the United States to 
continue to flow our forces into the region much more easily 
than if China, for example, had a military base on the Solomon 
Islands.
    It would also make it much easier for us to support some of 
our key allies there, including Australia.
    Senator Hirono. Dr. Hill and Mr. Zakheim, do you agree that 
we can do a lot more with our Island nation partners, i.e. 
Marshall Islands, the Micronesia, Palau, and other island 
nations?
    Mr. Zakheim. Yes.
    Dr. Hill. Absolutely.
    Senator Hirono. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
    Chairman Reed. Thank you very much, Senator Hirono. Senator 
Tuberville, please.
    Senator Tuberville. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Zakheim, 
how would you assess our military recruitment, with all the 
politics we have added into it in the last few years?
    Mr. Zakheim. We are below where we need to be, Senator.
    Senator Tuberville. Another question here on spending. In 
2023, the Department of Defense, we spent $163 billion on 
procurement, $139 billion on research and development. Don't 
you think that is a little bit much on research and development 
as compared to building machines and ammunition to fight wars?
    Mr. Zakheim. Well, Senator, I think we need to do better on 
procurement, as your question suggests.
    The R&D [research and development] is critical for the 
military we need for tomorrow, but we also need to emphasize 
the transition of our current force, and getting the software 
it needs and the AI infusion that is going to be critical to 
making these platforms useful in some of the scenarios we are 
discussing here.
    My own view is that the strategy is right, is we should 
focus on today and tomorrow, and the procurement needs to go 
up, Senator.
    Senator Tuberville. Yes, sometimes you worry about 
tomorrow, today, and tomorrow never happens, and it is 
dangerous, the world we live in now with all the hotspots.
    Also with the risk posed by our Army and Navy's efforts to 
divest, you know, and especially in the SSGN [subsurface guided 
nuclear], we are going to do away with one a year, which 
carries 154 Tomahawk missiles, and we are going to transition 
over to a boat that carries 40 missiles. Are we gambling here 
on this research that we are just talking about?
    Mr. Zakheim. Yes, again, I don't have an issue with levels 
of research, but I agree with you, Senator, that we are not 
doing enough on the procurement side to keep pace with 
retirements.
    You are right that the capability, both in terms of total 
number of boats and in terms of the tubes, in terms of what the 
boat could deliver is a huge problem for us in the Taiwan 
scenario.
    It goes to procurement, as you point out, the multi-year 
piece, the fact that we can't build as many as we are retiring. 
Ultimately, I think this is capital required for industrial 
capacity improvement here, Senator.
    Senator Tuberville. Doctor, you got a comment on that?
    Dr. Hill. I would just urge us to be really still 
emphasizing research as well as infrastructure that Senator 
Hirono also mentioned.
    As Dr. Lin said, our adversaries look out for the weakest 
links and we can be sure that China is spending an awful lot of 
money right now on research and development, including trying 
to get access to our own IP [intellectual property] and our 
other research as well. We can only really keep ahead, as you 
said, because there is always a risk that tomorrow never comes.
    We can only ever really keep ahead of our adversaries by 
being on the cutting edge. That is why America has always 
succeeded in the past, because we have managed to find a 
balance between the needs of today and what we think is coming 
across the horizon tomorrow.
    I think in a basic infrastructure, as the Senator pointed 
out, is pretty critical. We have just seen with what has 
happened in the earthquake in Turkey, how important roads are, 
port facilities, for example, how easily they can be destroyed. 
We need to be looking at where all our weak links are and what 
we can do to shore them up.
    Senator Tuberville. Thank you. Just one quick question, Mr. 
Zakheim on Ukraine and Russia, I have been perplexed for a year 
of what--how Putin has fought this war. He probably had some 
good thoughts about it. He kind of tiptoed into it. Do you 
think he is having second thoughts about not doing shock and 
awe like we did in Iraq?
    Mr. Zakheim. I think that was the original plan, and he 
realized that the military thought he had was not the one that 
was on the ground.
    Now I think the strategy has changed, as we are all 
reading, Senator, which is he is going to fight us for as long 
as it takes and allow his people to mow down until they are 
able to advance inch by inch, foot by foot.
    I think we, that is the side of freedom, Ukraine and its 
supporters, the West, the United States need to take advantage 
of this opportunity by speedily getting the platforms and 
capabilities in there not to allow this become a war of 
attrition.
    Senator Tuberville. This next wave of fighting that we are 
getting ready to have, don't you think, is going to be more of 
a precision fight, ISR [intelligence, surveillance, 
reconnaissance]. We are talking about tanks and stuff. Those 
things aren't going to last very long if we go that direction.
    Mr. Zakheim. Well, I think that is where the future of 
warfare is. We are going to see whether what you are describing 
is able to roll back Russian forces, which are actually 
embedded and encamped and dug into territory.
    I think that is why the Ukrainians need more of these 
conventional forces like tanks. I think they would also benefit 
from fighter aircraft as well to dislodging the Russian 
positions.
    Senator Tuberville. Because of the 500,000 troops Russia 
has got on the border, is that what you are saying?
    Mr. Zakheim. They are going to keep on pushing them in.
    Senator Tuberville. Yes. Thank you. Thank you, Mr. 
Chairman.
    Chairman Reed. Thank you. Senator Tuberville. Senator King, 
please.
    Senator King. Thank you. First, I want to welcome Senator 
Tuberville from the end of the row. He is now no longer at the 
end of the--Senator Tuberville, welcome to the--from not being 
on the end of the row, as you have been very ably----
    Senator Tuberville. It got very lonely on that end, 
especially with this big room that we had. Thank you.
    [Laughter.]
    Senator King. Mr. Zakheim, first, I want to thank you for 
your organization and leadership of the Reagan Defense Forum, 
which is a really important part of thinking through some of 
these strategic questions.
    Here is my question. It strikes me, as you look back at the 
Ukraine conflict, that if you combine the Ukrainians' will to 
fight with the resources of the West and the United States, 
Putin really in the long run doesn't stand a chance.
    It strikes me that Putin's best hope now is dividing the 
West and dividing the United States. Do you think that is a 
legitimate concern?
    Mr. Zakheim. I absolutely think that is part of the Putin 
strategy. I think he also questions the will of the West to 
continue to support Ukraine.
    Senator King. That is what I mean----
    Mr. Zakheim. Absolutely, yes. I agree with that.
    Senator King. He wants to divide us, get us tired of the 
conflict, and then he is just going to win through the passage 
of time.
    Mr. Zakheim. I think that is his approach, Senator. I 
agree.
    Senator King. You mentioned, you used the word a few 
minutes ago, speedily. One of my concerns is that, for example, 
with the tanks, our response has been slow and then we have to 
go through training.
    I am worried right now at this moment that the Russians are 
preparing for a major offensive in the East that the Ukrainians 
aren't going to be ready for because they don't have the 
equipment.
    In other words, we have telegraphed to them that we don't 
have the tanks there yet and they are going to try to take 
advantage of this gap. Is that something of concern?
    Mr. Zakheim. Yes, and I think the unclassified information 
I have reviewed certainly suggests that. The way I think about 
it, Senator, is the strategy here is to help Ukraine realize a 
counteroffensive, to break through that Russian line that is 
emerging in the Donbass.
    To do that, we should give them all the capabilities 
necessary. Tanks is one example. Fourth generation fighter 
aircraft is another. We tend to think about the platform and 
get stuck rather thinking about the strategy.
    If we trust Ukraine to restore its sovereign territory, 
then we should trust some of the platforms to do that, and not 
worry they are going to use the platform for some other purpose 
or escalate the battle beyond the territory of Ukraine.
    Senator King. Have the Ukrainians been respectful of those 
limitations in terms of escalating the battle into Russia?
    Mr. Zakheim. Best that I can tell, yes. There have been 
some debates, I believe, on the margins, but it has always been 
focused on within the sovereign territory of Ukraine.
    Senator King. Dr. Hill, I know you touched on this. It 
worries me, looking at a map yesterday, the Belarus border is 
about 60 miles from Kiev. If I were Putin, I would be very 
tempted to try to have another offensive toward Kiev and the 
decapitation of the government. I take it you believe that 
Belarusian politics and the regional balance does not raise the 
level of risk of that happening?
    Dr. Hill. Well, look, I think the risk is always there 
because, of course, Belarus and its President Lukashenko are 
very much dependent on Russia at this particular point. Of 
course, there is an awful lot of troops.
    I think that the pressures inside Belarus, political 
pressures would make it very difficult for Lukashenko to 
contemplate this. This would also be a huge alarm bell for all 
of the other former Soviet republics.
    I mean, if Belarus is been actually deployed in this war, I 
think we are going to see a pretty aggressive response from 
others as well.
    Senator King. Based upon the intelligence that we saw a 
year ago, we would know if the Russians were moving significant 
forces in that direction.
    Dr. Hill. Yes, we have seen buildup, you know, getting back 
to what Senator Tuberville was talking about before, about the 
placement of men and equipment there. Looks like some of them 
are being trained. But we haven't seen particularly at the 
moment that we are expecting waves of people going over the 
Belarusian border. But we mustn't rule it out.
    Senator King. In fact, that ties one of--part of the 
strategy probably of those deployments is to tie the Ukrainians 
down to some extent, defending that border rather than putting 
all their forces in the East and the South.
    Dr. Hill. Absolutely, and Putin is at pains all the time to 
still raise the threat to Kiev itself of another assault. I 
think getting back to what Mr. Zakheim said before about not 
being sanguine about anything actually. We have to be 
continuously vigilant and continue to look at the intelligence 
about any of these contingencies.
    Senator King. Dr. Lin, final question. The key to the 
success thus far of the Ukrainians has been their amazing 
courage and will to fight. What do you assess of--how do you 
assess the will to fight of the people of Taiwan and their 
leadership? Is there leadership of the Churchillian quality of 
Zelenskyy? Or are they closer to, let's say, Gandhi?
    Dr. Hill. That is an excellent question, Senator. I think 
Taiwan is strengthening its will to fight. It's being very 
encouraging for Taiwan to look at what Ukraine has 
accomplished, and it is instilling more confidence in the 
Taiwan people.
    I would also note that unlike Ukraine, where folks could 
leave the land, Taiwan is surrounded by water. So even if we 
are not necessarily seeing the strong will now, when push comes 
to shove, I think many people in Taiwan will find they have no 
escape routes and they need to fight for their home.
    Senator King. Thank you. Thank you all very much. Thank 
you, Mr. Chairman.
    Chairman Reed. Thank you, Senator King. Senator Scott, 
please.
    Senator Scott. I want to thank each of you for being here. 
I come from Florida. We have got 21 bases and three unified 
commands. Military is a pretty big deal, especially in our 
panhandle, but all across our State.
    So you look at the Chinese spy balloon, you look at them 
build a military to defeat us, you would think that American 
citizens would start waking up and saying we are to stop buying 
things from communist China because seems like they are taking 
the money they make to go--eventually defeat us is what their 
goal, so I guess the first thing is, do you think Americans are 
to stop buying things made in communist China because it 
ultimately flows to the Chinese Communist Party and it can hurt 
us? I mean, what do you all think?
    Dr. Hill. Sure. So I think we definitely, the U.S. 
Government is already imposing significant restrictions on 
export of technology that could be used, as far as we know, to 
fuel military civil fusion in China, as well as the PLA. With 
respect to technology below that, I think there is still a lot 
of advantage that Americans actually get from the cheaper 
products from China.
    Senator Scott. But doesn't China get a benefit?
    Dr. Hill. For some of the more cheaper products, not as 
much, but definitely on the higher end, China is benefiting 
more. So we need to desegregate where we want to limit our 
exports to China and where exports to China or buying from 
China could actually benefit United States consumers and United 
States citizens.
    Mr. Zakheim. Senator, I might add that I agree with the way 
Dr. Lin framed it. It is the strategic decoupling that is key. 
We have failed, and as you know, you have led on this in the 
Senate, to make sure that we are not giving China the types of 
capabilities through our commerce that enhance the top tip of 
the spear for part of their military.
    But we also have an interest in making China dependent on 
older technologies, and the scale of our exports to China in 
some ways could benefit us, but certainly on the military side, 
those elements, and I think we are seeing some good things out 
of the Bureau of Industry and Security and Commerce that are 
starting to put up walls, but it has taken way too long.
    Senator Scott. Do you think that China thinks we are 
getting weaker or stronger in relative to them? How do you 
think their leadership thinks?
    Mr. Zakheim. What I have read, and the way that they are 
planning is that they think they can beat us, particularly in 
the Taiwan scenario.
    Senator Scott. Right. What about, you read all this and 
what you hear is that how much time was put in on woke, having 
to woke military. It seems to me I have always thought we ought 
to have--I served in the Navy. I thought our job was to be a 
lethal military, that people are scared to death of us.
    So do you think that--what do you think the government of 
China thinks when they read that we are focused on pronouns and 
things like that rather than how we have the most lethal 
military force?
    Mr. Zakheim. Senator, I think the defense strategy is clear 
on this and it starts with Secretary Mattis, we need to focus 
on being the most lethal force, as you point out, focusing on 
the core mission. Anybody in the U.S. military wants to focus 
on their mission.
    We have done polling at the Reagan Institute, the Reagan 
National Defense survey. Politicization is a problem. The 
American people have reduced trust and confidence in the 
military because they believe the military is politicized.
    The more we can do to allow our military, our men and women 
in uniform to focus on warfighting, the better it will be for 
our military and the more it will deter China.
    Dr. Hill. I would like to make a comment that look, I am 
afraid that the more that we have partisan and political 
fights, the more adversaries think that we are weak. I have 
made that point many times in public before. They watch all of 
this and frankly, they think we have lost it.
    So the more I am afraid that we make statements like this, 
the more that we start attacking our fellow Americans for 
whatever perspective we think they come from, the more that 
Russia and China think that we are working ourselves out of 
history.
    They watch all of this very carefully, but not in the ways 
that you think. I think China and Russia do know that we still 
can be lethal, but we are most lethal when we get our act 
together and that we are all Americans fighting together on one 
side. That is what our adversaries and our friends are looking 
to us.
    They would like us to get over all of these fights that we 
are having internally, and so, I mean, I would just urge to--I 
don't understand what that label means. I am trying not to use 
labels. I think the more that we can stand up and just show 
that we are Americans in solidarity, the more we will be able 
to have a deterrent effect on our adversaries, and more will 
bring our friends behind us, because they are watching us and 
thinking, has America lost the plot at this moment?
    Senator Scott. So I just--we stopped the vaccine mandate 
just recently in December. One of the issues I think a lot of 
us have been focused on is how do we reinState people that were 
discharged and how do we make sure they are not put in an 
adverse monetary position. We have a problem with retention.
    We have a problem with recruitment. So how much do you 
think it would be important that we let people come back in, 
that for religious or health reasons, decided not to take the 
vaccine or--and also make sure that they don't have to pay back 
pay. They don't have to pay for training, things like that.
    Mr. Zakheim. Readiness is key here. We are not meeting our 
numbers, and so I believe this Congress has given authority to 
the Secretary of Defense and Department Health to do just that. 
It is about execution now at this stage, Senator Scott.
    Dr. Lin. If I could add, one major event that our military 
has over the PLA is the quality of our personnel. If you look 
at the what President Xi Jinping has mentioned in terms of 
priorities for the PLA, after military theory and organization, 
the second priority is development of the PLA personnel, and 
equipment comes after that.
    Senator Scott. Thank you, Chairman.
    Chairman Reed. Thank you, Senator Scott, and for the 
information of my colleagues, there are two votes beginning at 
11:30 a.m. Senator Manchin, please.
    Senator Manchin. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Thank you, all. I 
am so sorry, I had another meeting I had to speak at. I am sure 
you probably covered this in generality, but I would like to 
ask the questions again.
    First of all, I think what I am hearing loud and clear is 
if we have laundry that is dirty and need wash, don't do it in 
the public when the military is involved. I am hearing that 
loud and clear. Which probably every time we have military 
conversations or disagreement, it should be done in the skiff 
with all 100 of us so we can talk about it to each other, and 
how we come out of there unified.
    So that is a clear message you are giving us, and you got 
to continue to give that. I feel very strongly about that. Next 
of all, I would like--Dr. Lin, I will start with you. First of 
all, does the Taiwanese have the ability to defend themselves 
against mainland China, to be independent?
    If not, would they have the ability with the United States 
help? If it took the United States help, would we have any 
allies coming with us to defend Taiwan the way that they have 
come together in Europe on Ukraine?
    Dr. Lin. Thank you, Senator, for the question. So to be 
frank, Taiwan would not be able to stand by itself.
    Senator Manchin. It cannot defend itself, no matter what we 
do, no matter what equipment we give them.
    Dr. Lin. When you are talking about a large scale invasion, 
given the vast power disparities that China can bring to bear, 
Taiwan would not be able to stand alone.
    Senator Manchin. Okay. Can they do it with our help? Are we 
able to do it to deter that or just basically prolong it?
    Dr. Lin. Yes. So I think that is what the department is 
focused on with Taiwan as the pacing scenario, to make sure 
that the United States can be able to flow enough assets and 
have the right, both posture and capabilities, as well as 
operational----
    Senator Manchin. I am understanding there is a little bit 
of a difference of what we believe that they would need to 
defend themselves and be successful versus what they desire to 
have.
    Dr. Lin. So, when Taiwan thinks about his defense needs, 
its thinking not only about the high end contingency of the 
Chinese invasion, it is also thinking about the day to day gray 
zone incursions that China is flying into Taiwan's air defense 
identification zone. So, from their perspective, they need to 
cover all the different threats.
    Senator Manchin. Okay. How about allies? Which allies would 
come to the defense that look at Taiwan and the commitment 
other than the United States? I have not heard of other allies 
believing that it is of national interest to them to go and 
fight or support Taiwanese war against China.
    Dr. Lin. So, we are increasingly hearing from Japan that 
the defense of Taiwan is vital to Japanese national security. 
That is why they made the critical national security documents, 
the new documents that came out in December from Japan's end 
reflect the seriousness that Japan takes for its problem.
    Senator Manchin. About South Korea?
    Dr. Lin. South Korea--I would put South Korea lower than 
potentially Australia and other--I put Japan----
    Senator Manchin. Japan the highest.
    Dr. Lin. Australia. South Korea would be a bit lower.
    Senator Manchin. I got you, Okay.
    Dr. Lin. The Philippines would probably be somewhere 
between Australia and South Korea.
    Senator Manchin. We are pretty much effort in the 
Philippines right now trying to build that up. Okay, and Dr. 
Hill, Ukraine. Does Ukraine have the ability to fight and win 
the war to take back the Donbass and also Crimea?
    Dr. Hill. Well, it is not just Donbass and Crimea, it is 
also these are the two regions, as well as Kherson and 
Zaporizhzhia.
    Senator Manchin. Sure. I mean, basically putting their 
country----
    Dr. Hill. Yes--I, as much as we have been talking before, 
depends on the provision of military assistance from the United 
States and other allies, and also a diplomatic effort too.
    I think just primarily on the battlefield, it is going to 
be extraordinarily difficult, because, you know, we have 
already had a discussion about how much the Russians have dug 
in at this particular point.
    So, we need to have diplomacy pushing alongside the 
military. I can't honestly say about whether it is feasible for 
Ukraine. There are differences of opinion in the United States, 
UK, and among other----
    Senator Manchin. Are you all gauging the support of the 
Russian citizens toward this fight? Do they believe it is an 
honorable fight, it is a needed fight? It is one that they have 
to put their country and take back?
    Dr. Hill. This is being put to the test. What Putin is 
trying to tell the Russians at the moment is this is the third 
patriotic war after Napoleon's invasion, Nazi invasion. I mean, 
this is ridiculous of Russia, the Soviet Union, and the Second 
World War. Now, this is the next invasion.
    I think not all Russians are buying this. We have seen a 
million people leave, and I am not convinced myself that 
another additional 500,000 people are willing to be sacrificed 
on the front lines of what is, to some extent, a vanity project 
for Vladimir Putin.
    Senator Manchin. Do you think Ukrainians have the willpower 
and the people power to continue this fight?
    Dr. Hill. So, they certainly have the willpower. The people 
power is under some stress at the moment because of the sheer 
numbers that Russia is trying to push to the battlefield. We 
are aware of that, which is why, as Mr. Zakheim has been 
saying, it is very important to outweigh with the equipment. 
But again, diplomatic support is going to be crucial. It won't 
be just won on the battlefield, this war----
    Senator Manchin. Yes, but diplomatic--and I am always 
concerned the United States might intervene in, or the 
Europeans put so much pressure on to go to the negotiating 
table and Putin is going to walk away with a win. No matter if 
he loses, he will walk away with the propaganda win.
    Dr. Hill. I have exactly the same concerns, which is why we 
have to really step up our diplomacy with other countries to 
make very clear how unacceptable it is to have Putin get away 
with what is a violation of international--yes.
    Senator Manchin. My final--I am running out of time. I 
know, I am so sorry. If I may, sir. The, basically the will for 
our allies to stay in this fight, are they going to be forced 
back as energy independence or energy security or lack of it, 
or a need of the Russian energy cheap energy they have had 
before? Is that going to force maybe this to a table or to 
resolve prior to where it needs.
    Dr. Hill. This is much less of a factor than it was before. 
I think actually you will find that Europeans resolve is much 
stronger than perhaps is often seen from here.
    Senator Manchin. Thank you so much.
    Chairman Reed. Thank you, Senator Manchin. Senator Mullin, 
please.
    Senator Mullin. Thank you, Chairman, and just for common 
purposes, I want to see if there is any way I could get a list 
of promotions before we vote on them because I think I just 
voted on my brother-in-law to be promoted, and I wanted Billy 
to maybe put a hold on them before I do that.
    [Laughter.]
    Senator Mullin. I like him sometimes but not always.
    Chairman Reed. Absolutely. We could. You have to go through 
1,700 names but----
    Senator Mullin. Well, that is fine. I will find him pretty 
quick.
    Chairman Reed. No, that is no problem.
    Senator Mullin. Anyways, I appreciate the opportunity to 
serve on this Committee, and I want to go straight to, sir, 
forgive me if I miss your name, but Zakheim? Is that kind of--
--
    Mr. Zakheim. But I will take Zakheim.
    Senator Mullin. Say that again.
    Mr. Zakheim. Zakheim.
    Senator Mullin. Zakheim. All right, Zakheim. In 2022, to 
the National Defense Strategy Briefing mentioned our enemies 
use of irregular warfare as a way to destabilize our allies and 
undermine our conventional military power. Can you speak of the 
effects of Russia's energy warfare has had on Europe's resolve 
and the allies in Ukraine?
    Mr. Zakheim. Thank you for the question, Senator. I want to 
associate myself with what Dr. Hill just said, where they 
absolutely tried to intimidate and browbeat the Europeans into 
submission on the basis of turning off the spigots, and energy 
warfare is really what it came down to.
    I think in this regard, Europe, I guess from my standpoint, 
surprised me. They have diversified. Recently, as you may be 
aware Senator, Vladimir Putin is now going to reduce production 
because he hasn't seen the effects of this this form of 
warfare. So, I think it is actually been a good news story to 
date.
    Senator Mullin. Well, I have said this multiple times that 
U.S. energy independence brings on global stabilization. People 
want to do business with the United States.
    Dr. Hill, you made a reference that we should be trying to 
help our allies move more with food, fuel, and fertilizer.
    The problem is, is that underneath this current 
Administration, the war on energy, even the president's 
comments just recently that he is wanting to eliminate fossil 
fuels within 10 years, it causes problems with our allies, 
would you agree?
    Dr. Hill. Well, it depends on, you know, how we are framing 
all of that. I mean----
    Senator Mullin. Well, if we cut fossil fuels, you are going 
to damage food supply. As a rancher, someone that produces a 
lot of protein for the American people, I can't run my tractors 
and our semis on electricity. If I could, it would cost two or 
three more times to buy that product, which there is not the 
margin in there.
    So, it is going to hurt the food supply. Fertilizer, my 
lord, we saw the effects of that last year. So, when you make 
that comment, it would have to have worse effects on our allies 
because they would have to depend on somebody else for that.
    Dr. Hill. Well, look, you are absolutely right in making 
this distinction and I am glad you did, because, of course, 70 
percent of food production is fuel, just as you have pointed 
out. It is not the electricity, it is actually the fuel that is 
in the major equipment, but it is also for making fertilizer 
because all the ammonia phosphates and, you know, fertilizers 
are used with natural gas.
    So, we have to--what I was going to say is we have to have 
a very sensible discussion about all of this. There is another 
dimension beyond the fuel, fertilizer, food mix, which you have 
quite rightly pointed out, which is of nuclear energy, too. We 
haven't put this in the mix.
    Vladimir Putin has, of course, imperiled civilian nuclear 
power by attacks on the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant, going 
through the Chernobyl exclusion zone. We have been dependent on 
Russia for some of the fuel supply system for nuclear fuel.
    This is a time for us to step up into this realm as well. I 
think, possibly for this Committee and many others, we should 
be having a very sensible, open discussion on the complexities 
of this issue and how to balance it off.
    Senator Mullin. Thank you. I agree. Sir, what lessons 
should we learn from Russia's irregular warfare?
    Mr. Zakheim. Well, they have been effective with hybrid 
warfare. As you know, in Georgia, in Crimea. In this case, 
Putin was perhaps overconfident in his conventional forces 
capability and didn't pursue that route.
    Although I would note that the day before Russia had the 
physical land invasion of Ukraine, there were robust cyber-
attacks on Ukraine, on their government servers, and actually 
globally. So, we have to think of this conflict as one that is 
playing out in all domains, including, I think, what you are 
characterizing as the irregular domain as well.
    The notion that we are in some sort of steady State of 
either peace or conflict, the reality is that there are 
elements of military domains right now that are in active 
conflict, cyber being the primary example.
    Senator Mullin. Thank you, sir. With the fact that I came 
over from the House and we respect the time because we get 
cutoff, I am going to yield back the remainder of my time to 
you.
    Chairman Reed. Thank you. That is the example that everyone 
should follow. I agree. I think, Senator Mullin, you have added 
so much to the committee already.
    [Laughter.]
    Senator Mullin. You will get over it soon.
    Chairman Reed. With that, let me recognize for 5 minutes, 
Senator Blumenthal.
    Senator Blumenthal. Thank you. I am not going to use any of 
my 5 minutes to comment on any reaction. Thank you all for 
being here. It has been very, very helpful and enlightening. I 
have been to Kiev three times in the past year.
    Every time I go, I am so deeply moved and impressed by the 
resolve and resilience of the Ukrainian people, which I think 
in the end of the day is the reason that they will win. Because 
as Presidents Zelenskyy told me during one of my visits with 
him, they will fight to the last person and they will fight 
with pitchforks if they need to do it.
    I have supported his requests for the javelins and 
stingers, and then for long range artillery and still longer-
range artillery. The ATACMS [Army Tactical Missile Systems], 
not just the HIMARS [High Mobility Artillery Rocket System]. 
For the tanks that he needs, not just the Bradley and Stryker 
vehicles, but the Leopards and the Challengers. Now for the 
fighter aircraft.
    As important as those munitions and artillery and other 
hardware are, I think the morale and determination of the 
people of Ukraine is equally important. In that connection, I 
have worked with Senator Graham to support designating Russia 
as a State sponsor of terrorism.
    Every time I have met with Presidents Zelenskyy, he has 
mentioned it. In fact, when we brought him a copy of the 
resolution, passed unanimously by the United States Senate, 
asking the Administration to designate Russia as a State 
sponsor of terrorism, his face alighted.
    We presented him with the resolution in July, Senator 
Graham and I. It has meaning to the people of Ukraine. Would 
you agree with me that Russia should be designated a State 
sponsor of terrorism?
    Dr. Hill. I would actually have to say with regret that I 
would not. Let me just elaborate why. Because I think that what 
we really need to do is to be able to persuade other countries 
in the global South and elsewhere, that it is very important 
for them to support Ukraine and to push back against Russian 
aggression.
    We have to focus this on what Russia has done to violate 
Ukraine's territorial integrity. I think once you put it into 
that designation, you then start to have a lot of countries 
pull back from any support that they might have given, because 
the consequences of that will be questioning whether that's 
going to happen to them as well. We have many other conflicts 
around the world.
    We have Saudi Arabia's attacks on Yemen, for example, and 
many of those where I would hesitate to think that we would 
apply that designation. What we have to do when we look at this 
is to see whether we can actually use the precedent of whatever 
action we take.
    There is one other element that I do want to point out, 
though, that we should be making very clear that the United 
States, along with the United Kingdom, have a special role in 
supporting Ukraine because of the agreements that we had in 
1994 to support Ukraine's territorial integrity, sovereignty, 
independence, when we pushed them to give up nuclear weapons.
    One thing we haven't mentioned on this panel is the 
proliferation challenge that we now face because of this. So I 
do think that we, the United States, along with the United 
Kingdom and others, should be stressing continuously how much--
how important it is to support Ukraine. But I am afraid that 
with regret, I would hesitate taking this step.
    Senator Blumenthal. How about the Wagner Group? Would you 
agree with me that we should designate the Wagner group as a 
terrorist or a foreign terrorist group?
    Dr. Hill. I think that would fall into that category. I 
think with the Wagner Group and another paramilitary 
formations, we can discuss those, some of the atrocious acts 
that they are undertaking. They have actually attacked Special 
Forces of the United States in Syria in 2018.
    Senator Blumenthal. So, you would distinguish----
    Dr. Hill. I would distinguish Wagner. Is this the actions 
of particular groups under that State rubric.
    Senator Blumenthal. Let me ask you, over the course of this 
year, the prospect of potential escalation by Putin has been 
raised as a reason not to provide each of these weapons' 
platforms as we have gone along. I have said the danger of 
escalation has been vastly overestimated.
    Just as we have underestimated the capability of the 
Ukrainian forces, we have overestimated or exaggerated Putin's 
potential for escalating. Could you give me your thoughts about 
whether we are close to that escalation point, whether it would 
be triggered by the fourth-generation fighter aircraft that now 
we are urging be provided?
    Dr. Hill. I want to seed some of this to Dr. Zakheim, but I 
just want to make it very clear, Putin escalates all the time. 
Sending 500,000 extra people, 300,000 extra people to the front 
is an escalation.
    We are seeing a lot of caution, as we mentioned earlier, 
about crossing over into NATO territory because he doesn't want 
to have a full-on kinetic war with NATO. But I don't think that 
actually specific choices of equipment really--germane to this 
debate.
    Mr. Zakheim. I agree with Dr. Hill, and I think the point 
here is what is the platform going to be used for? Why is it 
necessary? That is the question that should animate 
decisionmaking with the emphasis on urgency and speed.
    I agree with you, Senator. I think fighter aircraft, ones 
that this Congress has authorized the United States military 
not to use anymore, that could easily be sent over there, could 
have a material impact on the fight within the sovereign 
territory of Ukraine.
    Senator Blumenthal. Thank you. Thanks, Mr. Chairman.
    Chairman Reed. Thank you, Senator Blumenthal. Senator 
Cotton, please.
    Senator Cotton. I agree with what Senator Blumenthal said 
that the Administration has been deterring itself from 
providing the Ukrainians the weapons they need. I would say 
from the very beginning they engaged in half measures while 
Ukraine has half succeeded, and they should quit pussyfooting 
around on the battlefield.
    I want to look before Russians launched this war, though, 
Mr. Zakheim, to what happened in 2021. Winston Churchill, in 
his famous Iron Curtain speech, cautioned against offering 
temptations to a trial of strength.
    He offered that caution specifically about the Russians, 
who had said he had just seen up close and personal as allies 
and friends for many years, and there is nothing they respect 
so much as military strength and nothing for which they have 
less respect than military weakness.
    Can you tell us how did the botched withdrawal in 
Afghanistan perhaps tipped Vladimir Putin to a trial of 
strength in Ukraine?
    Mr. Zakheim. Well, I think they correlate, Senator. I agree 
with the thrust of your question. The United States looked 
weak. It didn't look like it was going to--did not support the 
State until every U.S. servicemember went home and it looked 
like we were unable to carry out military operations. So, we 
looked defeated, and I think when you look weak, people like 
Vladimir Putin seek to exploit the opportunity.
    Senator Cotton. When Joe Biden took office, I think it is 
fair to say that Vladimir Putin's top two foreign policy 
priorities, at least as it related to the United States, were 
one, the extension of the New START treaty, which is a badly 
one-sided nuclear arms control treaty that the Obama 
administration entered, and two, the waiver of sanctions on the 
Nordstream 2 pipeline.
    In his very first week in office, Joe Biden extended the 
New START treaty. Shortly after that, he waived sanctions on 
Northstream 2 pipeline. How did Joe Biden's decision to give 
Vladimir Putin his top two foreign policy priorities without 
any concessions whatsoever perhaps tempt Vladimir Putin into a 
trial of strength in Ukraine?
    Mr. Zakheim. Well, it made clear to everybody, including, I 
think, President Biden, that engagement of Vladimir Putin, that 
seeking to put forward a carrot in order to prevent the type of 
behavior that we have seen consistently from Vladimir Putin, as 
mentioned before, from 2008 in Georgia, 2014 in Crimea, is not 
going to work.
    That, as you point out at the beginning of your question, 
Senator Cotton, President Putin responds to one thing, force in 
kind and strength. I think that is what the Ukrainians have 
shown and this Congress has supported, and actually pushed the 
President to be more forceful in that support and to understand 
the urgency that is required there.
    Senator Cotton. Let's look at the provision of weapons to 
Ukraine. Actually, let's go back to the Obama-Biden era since. 
In President Obama's era, we provided meals ready to eat and 
blankets not ammunition and javelins. Then since then it has 
been a constant story of ammunition but not artillery, 
artillery but HIMARS, HIMARS but not armor. Infantry fighting 
vehicles, but not tanks.
    Okay, tanks, but not fighters or ATACMS or cluster 
munitions or so forth. I have to assume, given this pattern, we 
are going to see provision of some of those weapons and 
platforms sometimes in the future when they are less effective 
than they would have been if they had been provided months ago 
or at the beginning of this war.
    But let's look at one in particular, since a lot of these 
things we are talking about, Bradley fighting vehicles, special 
Abrams tanks, F-16s do have long logistics tails and take some 
training. We have heard a lot today about Russians being dug in 
trench lines, almost World War I style warfare.
    We have more than 1 million cluster munitions in our 
stockpiles here in the United States. Today, we are not 
providing them in anything like sizable numbers. Could you 
explain what cluster munitions could do to help the Ukrainians 
perhaps break through the stalemate in Eastern Ukraine?
    Mr. Zakheim. Well, Senator, as you point out, they 
disperse, they clear the field, and they are very effective in 
having a strategic impact when you are dealing with the 
tactical problem that you have outlined.
    Senator Cotton. Why would we not provide cluster munitions, 
which would be ready to fire in a matter of days, unlike, say, 
an Abrams tank or an F-16?
    Mr. Zakheim. Well, I think anything that we have in our 
inventory that would be useful for this battle, we ought to 
offer the Ukrainians.
    Senator Cotton. Okay. One final question for you, Mr. 
Zakheim. This is in your role at the Ronald Reagan Institute. 
You will do an annual poll about the American people's respect 
and admiration for our military.
    It has shown alarming downward trends in recent years. Can 
you give us some thoughts, both on the poll and from your 
experience, in crafting these questions and following over the 
years about why that is the case?
    Mr. Zakheim. Senator, thank you for that. We do the Reagan 
National Defense Survey annually, and just 4 years ago, the 
American people's trust and confidence in military was over 70 
percent.
    As you referenced there, Senator, now it is actually below 
50 percent. The most recent defense survey we asked the 
respondents why, and the response was clear that the American 
people believe that the military has become politicized. That 
is expressed in a variety of different ways from civilian 
leadership politicizing the military, to military leaderships 
politicizing the military, to concerns about wokeism, and 
extremism, and divisive differently across percentage lines.
    But I think it is not a concern of the American people that 
the U.S. military is unable to carry out their core mission of 
protecting this country and being the best military force in 
the world. It is a concern about politicization penetrating 
their mission, Senator.
    Senator Cotton. Thank you.
    Chairman Reed. Thank you, Senator Cotton. Senator Kaine, 
please.
    Senator Kaine. Thank you, Mr. Chair, and to the witnesses. 
If I had 10 minutes of questioning, I would spend 5 comparing a 
Biden administration that has assembled a global coalition to 
stand for democracy against an illegal invasion, and a previous 
Administration that illegally withheld congressionally mandated 
arms sales to Ukraine to extort a political advantage by doing 
so.
    But I have 4 minutes and 39 seconds, and so I want to take 
2 minutes, Dr. Lin, with you on a question about China and 
diplomacy, and then 2 minutes with Dr. Hill and Mr. Zakheim 
about an ally's reference, picking up on some of your verbal 
testimony. Dr. Lin, in the events surrounding this spying 
balloon incident, the thing that has troubled me the most is 
not the capacity of a high-altitude balloon.
    I probably been troubled most by General Austin trying to 
call his counterpart in China and no one picking up the phone. 
What does this say about the diplomatic relationship, as an 
expert, that that is happening, and what do we need to do so 
that we have, at a minimum, clear channels of communication to 
avoid unnecessary escalations?
    Dr. Lin. Senator, that is an excellent question. I am not 
surprised that Secretary Austin's counterpart did not pick up 
the phone.
    We have a track record of us reaching out to the PLA, and 
them not picking up the phone, or responding at a much later 
time where it is no longer relevant to the situation that we 
are trying to deal with.
    It shows that across the United States engagement with 
China, our military-to-military ties and relationship is 
relatively weak. Despite the efforts of this Administration to 
focus on deconfliction, crisis communications with the PLA, we 
have not made significant progress.
    I wouldn't fault that to be on the United States side, I 
would fault that to be the Chinese. From their perspective, 
they have very little incentives to communicate or deconflict 
from us because they view our attempts to communicate with them 
as either allowing a green light of certain types of U.S. 
operations.
    Senator Kaine. Don't they, though, value stability and they 
wouldn't like surprises or accidents or miscalculations that 
weren't in their sort of intentional interest?
    Dr. Lin. They do value that. But we have seen since 2021 
that they have canceled the Military Maritime Consultative 
Agreement, the key military to military dialogs to prevent 
unsafe encounters or whatnot.
    I think from the Chinese perspective, they believe that if 
they can reach an agreement with the United States at the 
highest strategic level on how the relationship should be 
framed, all the other elements to fall in line, which is why 
from their perspective, they are very intent on constructing 
this framework of United States, China relations. Which from 
the United States perspective, that is only one piece of the 
relationship.
    Senator Kaine. Right. Thank you. To Dr. Hill and Mr. 
Zakheim, Dr. Hill, you said something about, I think it was in 
reference to American allies in the hemisphere, that we pay 
attention to problems rather than build relationships. Mr. 
Zakheim, you said we need to always focus on allies as one of 
the most important strengths we have. Against any adversary, 
the network of allies we have is important.
    I am the chairman of the Western Hemisphere subcommittee of 
the Senate Foreign Relations committee, and I see this 
throughout the Americas, deep Chinese involvement economically, 
humanitarian aid.
    You know, debt deals that will get you in trouble later but 
they might be attractive upfront. What our allies tend to say 
to us is we would rather deal with you. I mean, we are 
culturally more connected. We are suspicious of some of the 
Chinese offers that are on the table.
    But if they have got an offer and you have got nothing, how 
do we say to our people, well, we are turning down the free 5G 
system or the the port infrastructure bill. So, talk a little 
bit about, particularly in the Americas, your thoughts about 
the way to, you know, turn episodic attention to problems into 
a more sustained effort to build relationships.
    Dr. Hill. I think this is absolutely spot on, and we need a 
strategy because China has a strategy. Maybe they come in, as 
you said, in a very specific way, as with the Belt and Road 
Initiative, investments in energy in places like Venezuela, for 
example, coming in with other forms of assistance, targeting 
elites. We know that the Chinese are extremely, very good at 
honing in on elites and propping them up. Russia does exactly 
the same.
    It is part of this top-down approach that Dr. Lin has 
described, they look for a framework of the relations that 
starts at the top and then they let everything else flow from 
there. That is not the way that we approach our allies and 
partners in any hemisphere, let alone in the Western 
hemisphere.
    When I was in the previous Administration, I worried a 
great deal as a result of the crisis in Venezuela, that we 
didn't have a plan. That we didn't have deep relationships. We 
took a lot of other neighboring countries for granted, and we 
didn't have a deep relationships.
    Senator Kaine. Could I let Mr. Zakheim--we have identified 
the problem. He will give us the solution.
    [Laughter.]
    Mr. Zakheim. No pressure there, Senator. I do think the 
answer here is diplomacy that Dr. Hill is speaking about. 
Brazil was raised before, and President Biden's engagement, I 
think is absolutely critical. Trade and commerce, and this is 
what needs to grow. That is what we do best as a country, 
unleash our free market.
    We have tried this, and success and failed over the 
decades, but that continues to be worked aggressively. I think 
looking at Colombia, I think there is a layer where a security 
relationship appropriately tailored for the country can have a 
positive impact in terms of the type of effects that you are 
talking about, Senator.
    Senator Kaine. Thank you very much. Thank you, Mr. Chair.
    Chairman Reed. Thank you, Senator Kaine. Senator Budd, 
please.
    Senator Budd. Thank you, Chairman Reed, and Ranking Member 
Wicker. I am honored to join the Armed Services committee, and 
I will certainly be a good steward of our military interests in 
North Carolina.
    Senator Wicker, I will work to keep your legacy alive at 
Seymour Johnson Air Force Base. Appreciate your service there. 
It is clear that deterrence failed in Ukraine. I am deeply 
concerned that the Biden administration's policies and actions 
will similarly lead to deterrence failing in Asia, and that 
China will attempt to take Taiwan by force.
    Mr. Zakheim, you were recently reappointed to the National 
Defense Strategy Commission. Understanding that the Commission 
work just started on the 2022 National Defense Strategy, what 
does the NDS get right, and please give two or three examples 
of what the Biden administration got wrong.
    Mr. Zakheim. A glaring gap in the national defense strategy 
of the Biden administration, but I think it was also true for 
the Trump administration, is that Senator, when you look for 
the world resources, dollars, what is required to execute that 
strategy, you will not find that word.
    So, I think for policymakers and elected officials, your 
challenge is to figure out what is exactly required to realize 
the significant objectives of that defense strategy. That is 
where I think the Commission historically has been helpful, and 
I think we will do so again. I think the simultaneity question 
that came up earlier, Senator, would be a second, I point to.
    It is quite different than 2017 where we didn't see as 
clearly and didn't have as much evidence of this Russia, China 
axis. It is live, it is real, and we need to think through 
that.
    Nuclear weapons cannot be the only answer, nor can some 
kind of vague reference to allies. It needs to have meaning. 
AUKUS is a good step, but that should be one of many examples 
which right now we don't have.
    Senator Budd. Thank you. Continuing on, last year you told 
this committee that a strategy of deterrence by denial is a 
sound approach to keep China from invading Taiwan. Do you 
maintain that position? If so, what is your current assessment 
of our posture in the Indo-Pacific? Should we, for example, 
invest more heavily or move faster in specific areas?
    Mr. Zakheim. Yes, I do think the denial approach, 
deterrence by denial is still sound, although as mentioned 
earlier in this hearing, some of the key elements, particularly 
undersea warfare capability, fast boats, submarines are just 
not being produced at a clip that will realize that--you know, 
the deterrence by denial.
    I think this committee and this Administration previous 
mission has done a good job investing in some of the 
capabilities, missiles, anti-ship missiles. Long range 
precision munitions are key for that fight that was less 
apparent or we hadn't addressed that sufficiently the last go 
around.
    So, I think those would be two areas where we need to 
emphasize really that are critical to accomplishing the 
deterrence by denial strategy. Last point on that, Senator, I 
would also say that we have to continue to focus on balancing.
    Whereas Taiwan might be the most apparent and clearest 
flash point, the Indo-Pacific has other challenges. China has 
other ambitions in their global nature, as we see most recently 
in terms of China invading our aerospace.
    Senator Budd. So, Mr. Zakheim, much has been made about 
potential timelines for a Chinese invasion of Taiwan, but 
predicting when might make war seem inevitable, an invasion 
seems inevitable. So, what are the near and long term risks of 
deterrence failing without significant and sustained growth of 
our defense budget?
    Mr. Zakheim. Well, I take the view here that this strategy, 
which is a bipartisan strategy between the Biden and Trump 
administration, wants to deter for today. It recognizes the so-
called Davidson window as a real possibility, and we have to 
deter and operate with the urgency that it could happen today.
    That is the best way to push it out to tomorrow, and with 
tomorrow, we need to continue to make those investments where 
we have the modernized force that China is clearly investing 
in.
    I think one thing this committee has done well, we know 
about the Chinese military modernization because this committee 
requires an annual China military modernization report. We 
learn a lot and we educate the public around it.
    As much as we are concerned about what China is doing with 
their signal fusion, just focusing on their core military 
modernization has revealed what a significant challenge we are 
facing today.
    Senator Budd. Thank you. Many Americans, some would say a 
majority of Americans, support Ukraine, including the 
reclaiming of territory taken by Russia. A growing number of 
Americans, however, are rightly concerned in the U.S.--that the 
U.S. is providing too much aid, particularly in comparison to 
our European allies.
    So, in my limited time, Dr. Hill, given that the United 
States is no longer resourced to fight two major wars 
simultaneously, we must consider real tradeoffs between 
continuing to arm Ukraine or being ready to deter, or if 
necessary, defeat a Chinese invasion of Taiwan.
    Where and how should the United States encourage our 
European allies to step up so we can free up resources to focus 
on the priority theater in the Indo-Pacific?
    Dr. Hill. Thank you, Senator. But I actually think that 
Russia and China are fused together in this regard. We all 
forget that Russia is actually in Asia, and as a Asia-Pacific 
power, it actually has a long border with China. In fact, the 
longest border that Russia has in any country is with China.
    Russia has benefited from China's assistance and 
facilitation of this war, including moving its own troops from 
the Russian Far East to the front in Ukraine. So, China and 
Russia are part of the same problem, unfortunately. I do agree 
with you that we need to work very closely with our European 
allies.
    We also have European allies who are interested in the 
Asia-Pacific region, the AUKUS alignment, for example, includes 
the United Kingdom. We have unfortunately got into a bit of a 
spat with France over that, but I think we can recover from 
this.
    We need to think about our other European allies that are 
major maritime powers, which France and the United Kingdom 
actually are. But I do think we need to recognize that 
Europeans are stepping up on the front in Ukraine. We may also 
have to ask Europe what it is prepared to do in the Indo-
Pacific region as well, because they have interest.
    Senator Budd. Very good. Thank you. My time has expired.
    Chairman Reed. Thank you, Senator Budd. Senator Rosen, 
please.
    Senator Rosen. Well, thank you, Chairman Reed, Ranking 
Member Wicker, for holding this very timely hearing on global 
security challenges, which comes ahead of the unfortunately, 
the 1-year anniversary of Vladimir Putin's brutal and 
unjustified invasion of Ukraine. As Russia and Ukraine, of 
course, we know they are both preparing for spring counter 
offensives because of the weather there.
    It is absolutely critical, I believe, that the United 
States and our allies stand with Ukraine for as long as it 
takes to help the Ukrainian people win. So, Dr. Hill, I want to 
build on a question that Senator Manchin asked you. If Ukraine 
were to undertake a military operation in Crimea, which was 
illegally annexed by Russia in 2014, how could the United 
States and NATO allies deter Russian escalation short of a 
direct military confrontation between NATO and Russia?
    Dr. Hill. Well, first of all, Senator Rosen, thank you very 
much for this question, but there is a lot of territory between 
the Ukrainian front lines and Crimea at this particular point. 
The Ukrainians have been able to penetrate into the airspace 
over Crimea using drones and the long-range missiles.
    We have seen some of this happen. But in actual fact, what 
Putin is trying to do is consolidate all the territory around 
Crimea to keep it. In fact, what Mr. Zakheim was already 
talking about, which is the military battle in the Donbass 
region, in Zaporizhzhia region, Kherson is pretty important.
    So, we have got to look at that before Crimea comes onto 
the agenda. Now, there is a case, and I think that we have to 
be discussing this with the Ukrainians, behind the scenes about 
what to do when it comes to the issue of Crimea over the longer 
term. Russia has claimed all of this territory, not just 
Crimea. We have to figure out how are we going to push those 
claims back.
    It is not just a question of how far we can push Ukrainian 
territory forward again in this battle, but what are we going 
to do about that territory over the longer term? The Ukrainians 
were willing to discuss some of the formulations 
internationally prior to all of the atrocities that have been 
carried out here.
    I think we have to have an international level discussion 
in the United Nations of how to handle this. It is unacceptable 
at any point for Russia to have any kind of political control 
and claims of sovereignty over Ukrainian territory. So, it is 
not just a question of what happens when Ukraine tries to 
retake territory, but how are we going to handle this over the 
longer term.
    Senator Rosen. Well, thank you, and I kind of want to build 
on that because we know that we are trying to add Finland and 
Sweden. Their NATO ascension is really going to bolster our 
alliance, of course, in significant ways. We all know that.
    So, what do you think the advantages, comparative 
advantages, or the challenges that we might have bringing them 
into the alliance. Will that help us? How will that help us in 
some of the things that we are trying to do as well?
    Dr. Hill. Well, look, Finland and Sweden have made a 
strategic decision to join NATO. They could have gone to any 
point since World War II, since the creation of NATO, and they 
did not. Finland has a very long border with Russia. It was 
attacked by the Soviet Union in the 1930's, 1940's.
    Finland has actually got an incredibly important defensive 
posture. They can put up to 800,000 people under arms. So, 
Finland is determined to defend itself and is also making it 
very clear that it wants to be part of the defense of Europe, 
so this is very significant. Sweden was completely neutral up 
until this point. This is a huge rupture in the strategic 
posture of Sweden.
    Sweden is also making it clear that it intends to defend 
Europe writ large, too. This puts on the agenda a whole 
rethinking of our European security posture. This isn't just 
something that the United States has to step up to, Sweden and 
Finland are stepping up as well.
    Senator Rosen. Thank you. I want to build on that in a 
minute or so I have left. Dr. Lin, I want to talk with you a 
little bit about mainly maintaining our defense technological 
edge. Global competition, we have declining R&D, we have 
contracting challenges, we have a huge STEM workforce gap, 
huge.
    There are just a few of the impediments that we have to 
growing at the edge with our adversaries. We see them all 
around. We have been talking about this today, particularly 
China, and that is a pacing challenge for us.
    How, in your opinion, do you assess the United States' 
ability to develop, to adopt, to deploy these emerging 
technologies for national security, and particularly as 
compared to China, which we know is really moving forward 
pretty quickly?
    Dr. Lin. I guess I will separate the development of 
technology into two aspects. One is developing of the talent, 
which I think China is able to do much faster because they have 
more of the STEM education, because they are able to redirect 
education in certain ways that we and the United States 
Government are not--don't have the same authoritarian powers to 
do.
    I would say that when it actually comes to the fielding and 
ability to operate these emerging technology, that is where, 
and this goes back to our discussion earlier, the personnel and 
the training within the PLA is far lacking than the United 
States. So, we can see a lot of, for example, new weapon 
systems online, but that doesn't mean that China's actually 
able to operate these new weapons systems.
    I would say that I wouldn't characterize the United States 
as necessarily lagging behind the Chinese. I would say we have 
different advantages in terms of we have the personnel and we 
are able to incorporate the technologies, but China--I am 
sorry, on the military side.
    But China is able to invest more and is also able to have 
more--they have also more STEM graduates to help try to develop 
that technology to begin with.
    Senator Rosen. So, you would say going broad and deep in 
STEM education, starting as early as possible, pre-K all the 
way through to develop the pipeline would be in our critical 
best interest.
    Dr. Lin. Yes, for sure.
    Senator Rosen. Thank you.
    Chairman Reed. Thank you very much. Senator Sullivan, 
please.
    Senator Sullivan. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and 
unfortunately, my colleague from Virginia is not here. Had I 
had 10 minutes to raise an issue, I would have asked you guys, 
a previous Democratic administration, the Obama administration 
wouldn't give the Ukrainians javelins because they were scared 
about sparking a war with Putin. The next Administration, the 
Trump administration, immediately gave javelins.
    Previous Democratic administration, the Obama 
administration declared a red line in Syria, then watched 
everybody walk over it, invited the Russians into the Middle 
East for the first time in decades, and the next Administration 
declared a red line in Syria with Russian proxies saying if 
they get any closer to our special forces, we will destroy 
them. Then we destroyed them. Hundreds of them, killed them.
    So, there is a lot of comparisons here, and I just want my 
colleagues to know, but I don't have 10 minutes. I am going to 
turn to another topic that is all about American strategy and 
that is energy. I am glad to see Senator Manchin, Senator 
Mullin have raised this.
    A very memorable meeting I had many years ago with our 
former chairman here, Senator McCain, and a Russian dissident, 
very brave Russian dissident who is now in jail, Vladimir Kara-
Murza, I had asked him, what more can we do to undermine the 
Putin regime?
    What more can we do to go after Putin and the oligarchs? He 
said it is easy, Senator. The number one thing you can do as a 
country is produce more American energy, number one. Do you 
agree with that, Dr. Hill, Mr. Zakheim?
    If you can keep your answers short, I have a bunch of 
questions. American energy as a really important tool of 
American power to deal with great powers like Russia and China.
    Dr. Hill. Well, I would say yes, writ large, together with 
our allies and rethinking also our energy posture, absolutely.
    Mr. Zakheim. Yes.
    Senator Sullivan. Thank you. Dr. Lin, someone else who is 
very scared of American energy dominance is Xi Jinping. You 
read the reporting, it makes him very nervous. I was just in 
the Middle East, 60 percent of China's oil and gas goes through 
the Straits of Hormuz. If we are in a conflict with them, we 
could shut that down in 10 minutes.
    Does American--is American energy dominance important for 
us, all the above oil, gas, renewables, whatever, but certainly 
oil and gas, is that important for our competition with China? 
Is that something we should emphasize?
    Dr. Lin. Absolutely, and China imports about 70 percent of 
its oil, so it is a huge dependency that China needs to work 
around.
    Senator Sullivan. So, they are scared when they look at 
American energy dominance, is that correct?
    Dr. Lin. Yes.
    Senator Sullivan. Let me ask another question. We haven't 
done American energy dominance. We haven't produced more 
American energy. To the contrary, when this Administration came 
into office, they did three things. They immediately started 
shutting down their production of American energy. They 
immediately started shutting down American energy 
infrastructure.
    They immediately started pressuring American financial 
institutions not to invest in American energy, and then when 
the prices of energy went up on working families, they went 
overseas. President bended knee to the king of Saudi Arabia, 
begging for more oil, lifting sanctions on Venezuela, a 
terrorist regime to get more oil, and they make it harder to 
produce American energy here.
    Let me ask you this question, assume that there was a 
project in America, $9 billion investment, 200,000 barrels a 
day, 2,500 jobs to build it, 75 percent of which are union, 
lowest greenhouse gas emissions in the world, highest 
environmental standards in the world of any energy project.
    From a national security perspective, if that was in front 
of you right now, would you say approve it or would you say, 
no, keep begging from Saudi Arabia and Venezuela? What would 
you do, Dr. Lin? Will you approve a project like that?
    Dr. Lin. I would approve it, but I would also continue to 
strengthen our relations with Saudis and many of our partners.
    Senator Sullivan. I agree 100 percent, but not Venezuela, 
right?
    Dr. Lin. No, not Venezuela.
    Senator Sullivan. You don't need to go begging from them. 
Dr. Hill, would you approve a project like that, from a 
national security perspective. That is all I ask.
    Dr. Hill. From a national security perspective, absolutely, 
but we also need to look at the domestic versus the export 
potential.
    Senator Sullivan. Correct.
    Dr. Hill. Because I think what we have got--what we are 
talking about here is how much energy that the United States 
can also export in our own----
    Senator Sullivan. But 200,000 barrels a day, that gives us 
muscle, right, from America----
    Dr. Hill. Certainly, in the short to medium term it does.
    Senator Sullivan. Yes, absolutely. Dr. Zakheim, what about 
you?
    Mr. Zakheim. I agree.
    Senator Sullivan. Okay, thank you. Now, final question. 
Assume we had a senior Administration official who goes to 
Asia, who cautions our allies in Asia not to purchase clean 
burning American LNG and then tells these same Asian allies 
don't help some of the other countries, ASEAN countries, for 
example, transition from coal to gas, make them transition from 
coal to wind turbines. Would that be smart American foreign 
policy, diplomatic policy as it relates to Asia and building 
our alliances? Does that make sense to any of you?
    Dr. Hill. There is one element and----
    Senator Sullivan. Well just real quick because I am out of 
time, but----
    Dr. Hill. No, no, but the point is that China is making 
huge inroads on renewables and on in a green energy use, 
including on constructing turbines. So it wouldn't necessarily 
be the wrong thing to do, if we can also have the technology 
that----
    Senator Sullivan. China is building a coal plant a week, 
and in ASEAN, they want to build more coal plants. We have 
John, I am naming John Kerry, if you haven't noticed. Does that 
make sense for John Kerry to go to Asia and warn our allies not 
to buy American LNG and tell the ASEAN countries you can't go 
from coal to gas, you have got to go from coal to windmill, 
which no industrialized country has ever done. Dr. Lin, does 
that make any sense?
    Dr. Lin. So I think one of the concerns that countries 
particularly in ASEAN but also in Pacific Island have is about 
climate change and how that affects their national security. So 
I don't know is, what Secretary Kerry was thinking behind that. 
But I think from a U.S. perspective, it makes sense to 
encourage our allies and partners to buy American.
    Senator Sullivan. To buy American LNG. Dr. Zakheim.
    Mr. Zakheim. I associate with Dr. Lin.
    Senator Sullivan. Thank you.
    Chairman Reed. Thank you, Senator Sullivan. I am going to 
recognize Senator Duckworth and ask Senator Warren to take over 
as I go vote. I shall return. Someone said that once. Excuse 
me.
    Senator Duckworth. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Welcome to the 
panel. I want to pick up on a thread from earlier in the 
conversation and discuss why I find the CCP's actions across 
the Indo-Pacific, from the Mekong River to the South China Sea 
to the Pacific island nations, so incredibly troubling.
    It is no secret that the CCP is using economic coercion and 
expanding its diplomatic presence in this key area of the 
world. Reality dictates that countries in this region cannot 
simply ignore China's presence and proximity.
    Yet I still hear from our allies and partners about how the 
United States remains a strong partner of choice, and even 
those who are not yet allies and partners. I sat down and had a 
meeting with the prime minister of Cambodia, and he said he 
wanted to engage with the United States as a partner when it 
comes economically--to economic engagement. Which brings me to 
my first question.
    Dr. Lin, it is lovely to see you again, and I appreciated 
your insights when I was preparing for my travel to Taiwan last 
year, and I look forward to hearing more of your thoughts as I 
plan another trip to the region. Your testimony highlighted how 
our Nation's alliances and partnerships are a critical 
advantage over the PRC, and I couldn't agree more.
    That is why I am leading a CODEL next week to Indonesia and 
Japan to discuss a wide range of issues, including energy 
security and the role that biofuels can play in reducing our 
reliance on fossil fuels. Facilitating greater economic 
engagement among friendly nations or those who would like to 
become more friendly.
    The importance of expanding people to people academic 
exchanges, including those that have brought many Indonesians 
to study in Illinois. I will also engage both countries on 
bolstering multilateral organizations like ASEAN.
    Dr. Lin, how do you see the role of multilateral 
partnerships and agreements in countering malign CCP activity? 
How can the United States best show support for all of our 
Southeast Asian partners with our relationships with them, but 
also encouraging other partners like Taiwan to engage with our 
Southeast Asian partners? Thank you.
    Dr. Lin. Senator Duckworth, great to see you, too. I am 
really heartened that you are taking another trip to the 
region, because part of what we need to do from the United 
States, not only the Biden administration, but also through our 
Congress, is to have more visits to the region.
    Our own presence there to the region reassures our allies 
and partners, and also showcases that we care and are listening 
to them to what they are most concerned with. With respect to 
multilateral organizations, we are already doing quite a bit in 
this area, and I would point out for Indonesia, what is 
particularly valuable is the recent Indonesian agreement with 
Vietnam to settle their disagreements over the EEZ, and that 
settlement is a model that should be emulated, or that we 
should support other Southeast Asian countries to do because it 
shows that we can, or rather United States and other partners 
can settle disputes peacefully in the South China Sea.
    That is a clear pushback against China's claims in the 
South China Sea, the nine dash line claims. As from Japan, I 
would recommend that given all the major shifts that were 
happening, that we are seeing since this December in terms of 
Japan's national defense strategy and whatnot, your trip comes 
at a very pivotal point to really understand what direction 
Japan is taking.
    We had discussed earlier that Japan is likely one of the 
few countries that Taiwan can probably depend on more among 
United States allies for its defense.
    Senator Duckworth. Thank you, and you touched on this. I 
think that there are current cooperation agreements that we can 
expand upon, and there are new partnerships we should pursue to 
ensure stability in the Indo-Pacific region.
    I also think we need to look at what is happening in 
Europe, specifically the war of choice in Ukraine. So my next 
question, Dr. Lin--to both, Dr. Lin and Dr. Hill, building on 
what Dr. Lin was just talking about, with working with our 
Asian partners to expand more of these partnerships and 
agreements.
    With only a few exceptions, many countries in Southeast 
Asia have not joined in sanctioning Russia following the 
invasion of Ukraine, and many of them are watching what is 
happening in Russia and gaining a different lessons learned for 
what that means for them, whether it is Taiwan, whether it is 
for freedom of navigation in the South--in the Indo-Pacific 
region.
    What message or actions help convince our non-European 
allies and partners to condemn Russian action? Conversely, what 
message in action resonate with European allies and partners as 
a counter to CCP malign activity? How do we get more of our 
engagement with Europe, and to get our European partners to 
understand that the Indo-Pacific region is important to them 
too?
    Dr. Lin. Right. So in terms of getting more Asian allies 
and partners on board to sanction Russia, I think part of it is 
also trying to understand what is holding them back. Is it 
because they are very dependent on Russian arms? Is it because 
they are dependent on certain types of trade with villagers?
    Or to the extent that we can decrease their dependency on 
Russia? I think that is a way in which we could shift their 
perspective because there's something holding them back. I 
think most guys you recognize that Russia's invasion of Ukraine 
is a clear atrocity and something that they oppose, but it is 
getting them to the sanctions that we need to work on.
    Senator Duckworth. Dr. Hill.
    Dr. Hill. I agree completely with Dr. Lin. I think, you 
know, part of the issue that we face, not just in Southeast 
Asia but elsewhere, is a lot of countries are values neutral 
when they look at this.
    So we have to clarify what is at risk. It is not autocracy 
versus democracy because they can constantly challenge us. It 
is really the violation of territorial integrity. So when Dr. 
Lin was talking about the importance of those helping Indonesia 
and Vietnam to work out their territorial disputes, this is 
what we have to clarify for countries in other regions. 
European countries are stepping up to try to make this point 
too.
    It is the point that Finland and Sweden are making as they 
seek to join NATO. Poland, the Baltic states, other countries 
are expressing their deep concern, and that this is also a 
problem in the Indo-Pacific region.
    India, for example, is a really important country to engage 
on this, and I hope that Members of this Committee will think 
about going to India. I know you already have had meetings with 
Indian officials, because India faces territorial disputes, not 
just with Pakistan, but also with China in the Himalayas.
    India is wondering what are we going to do in the event of 
another outbreak of conflict there, for example, just as other 
countries around Asia wondering what our posture is going to be 
on these issues? That's what we have to clarify.
    Senator Duckworth. Thank you.
    Senator Warren. Thank you. Senator Schmitt is recognized.
    Senator Schmitt. Thank you, Madam Chair. I would say that I 
am very proud to be on this committee. This committee in 
Missouri has had a long history of service on this committee 
and look forward to working with all my fellow committee 
members.
    As you know, there has been a lot of discussion of China, 
and rightfully so. As part of their ambition to project power 
across the world, they have been more aggressive in building 
military bases and partnerships with countries like Sri Lanka 
and the Solomon Islands and Cambodia.
    A lot of Chinese firms now own and operate assets in 96 
ports in 53 countries, all of which can be used to establish 
logistics and intelligence networks in strategic locations, 
enabling China to project its power globally.
    This network poses significant threat to the United States 
and our allies, there is no doubt about that, particularly if 
China can cutoff access that our military needs during 
difficult times or times of conflict.
    I guess Mr. Zakheim, maybe direct this to you initially 
because they don't have a ton of time. I want to get through at 
least a couple of questions. What specific actions should the 
Department of Defense undertake to ensure that China does not 
gain further access to ports throughout the world, especially 
in the South China Sea?
    Mr. Zakheim. Thank you, Senator. I think the critical thing 
for the Department of Defense or other pieces for government to 
deal with China's reach globally in the ways you have described 
is that we need to push out our logistics capability.
    The notion that somehow, we are going to rely on shipping 
or transport aircraft to deliver forces, material to the 
battlefield like we did in the last century is not going to 
happen. That is why I think you see some of these memos coming 
out for those military leaders focused on pre-positioning, on 
the TRANSCOM type issues are most concerned because it is about 
getting there first with speed and making sure the kill chain 
is not reliant on pulling back the capability, you know, an 
ocean plus away.
    Senator Schmitt. Then, while we are talking about China, 
which I certainly believe is our biggest threat, what do they 
believe is their biggest weakness in a potential conflict with 
a foreign adversary, particularly the United States? How do 
they view that?
    Mr. Zakheim. I continue to believe, and I defer to Dr. Lin 
here and her studies of this as well, is that our undersea 
capability is something that I think spooks them. That is the 
one I would start with. It is why think we need to double down 
on it. They don't have the answer.
    The quicker we can move from manned to unmanned, as well as 
sustaining the current man capability is our comparative 
advantage, and we should be investing that in a significant, 
urgent, speedy fashion.
    Dr. Lin. Senator, I think one of--the Chinese don't say 
this quite easily. I think one of their biggest weaknesses that 
they see is actually their personnel because they don't do it--
unlike the United States, where we have had significant 
experience fighting different types of wars, they have had very 
limited fighting experience.
    Even though they have the equipment, there is no guarantee 
that transitioning from even a large-scale exercise to a minor 
conflict, they would be successful, much less a very high end 
contingency, one of the most complex operations we can think 
about in terms of the Chinese amphibious invasion of Taiwan.
    Senator Schmitt. I will just open this up to all three of 
you for probably the last question that I have time for, but 
you have all spoken about threats of foreign actors, especially 
in Western Asia.
    One concern that I have is that we remain focused on 
obviously, those important threats, but may ignore threats 
closer to home, to our own borders. What actions should the 
department take to protect our national interests in the 
Western Hemisphere, specifically the Southern border and in the 
Panama Canal Zone?
    By the way, how should we engage South--Central and South 
America in some of these efforts?
    Dr. Hill. Yes. I mean, this obviously picks up on the 
question that Senator Kaine raised, and I analyze the problem 
that actually, Mr. Zakheim came up with a few solutions here in 
terms of our relationships with some of those critical 
countries.
    I think we need to assess the strength of our relationships 
with our Western Hemisphere allies, thinking about how we can 
capitalize on the recent Presidential visit to Brazil and how 
Brazil can play a larger role not just in the region, but 
internationally because of its role in the BRICS.
    Our relationship with China and Russia and India. Thinking 
about our relations with Mexico, that helps that relationship 
overall, not just as Mexico a problem, but how this can be 
strengthened as an alliance and as a relationship going 
forward.
    I think we need to have a whole scale assessment of the 
nature of our military, diplomatic trade, as Mr. Zakheim, 
relationships, said, and be paying particular attention to 
those countries where China and also Russia have penetrated in 
terms of their military or intelligence investments, for 
example.
    Mr. Zakheim. I will just add, Senator, that Plan Colombia 
was a great success. I think what I have read and the 
conversation that is at risk, that is a model that needs to be 
replicated and we need to strengthen it in Colombia. That is 
coming out the military security cooperation plane, and I think 
it would have the effects that you rightfully point out we need 
in the Western Hemisphere.
    Senator Schmitt. Thank you.
    Chairman Reed. Thank you, Senator. Let me recognize Senator 
Warren, please.
    Senator Warren. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. So we often talk 
about the role of aircraft carriers and hypersonic weapons, 
excuse me, in the great power competition, but I would like to 
zero in on what people bring to the fight, specifically, our 
military personnel. Leaders in the People's Republic of China 
have repeatedly raised concerns that they lack personnel who 
are both capable and highly skilled for modern warfare.
    A report for the United States-China Economic and Security 
Review Commission found that, ``many People's Liberation Army 
commanders are still judged as incapable of properly assessing 
situations, making operational decisions, deploying forces or 
leading forces.'' We don't want to underestimate China's 
capabilities, but that is a pretty sorry State of affairs.
    Dr. Lin, you are an expert on China and you were the Senior 
Advisor advising the Department of Defense in both the Obama 
and Trump administrations. So tell me, Dr. Lin, how important 
are personnel in winning on the battlefield?
    Dr. Lin. Thank you, Senator Warren. Personal is absolutely 
important. As you indicated and as I mentioned earlier to 
Senator Schmitt, I think that is one of the major weaknesses 
that the Chinese assess to be within their PLA.
    They aren't worried about whether they can get another, for 
example, Dongfeng-41 missile or another submarine. They are 
worried about whether their personnel can perform. So it is 
absolutely critical.
    Senator Warren. Okay. People, people, people. But after 
years of having forces that have little more than a 9th grade 
education, PRC is now starting to attract significantly more 
educated recruits. Dr. Lin, how successful has the PLA been at 
retaining more skilled troops?
    Dr. Lin. So you are correct in saying that China, the PLA 
is attracting more educated PLA recruits, but I am not--we 
don't really have really good statistics on how they are in 
terms of retaining them. But I would say that the respect for 
the PLA broadly in China is nowhere close to the respect for 
the United States military in the United States.
    Senator Warren. It is an interesting point on this, because 
unlike the Chinese government, we actually care about our 
people. Still we have our own recruiting and retention 
challenges here at home. For example, U.S. military families 
living in unsafe housing or struggling to access health care 
that they need.
    I am looking forward to working on the personnel 
subcommittee with Senator Scott to tackle these problems. Dr. 
Lin, if the United States substantially disinvested in the 
programs we have to support our military workforce, things like 
access to child care and violence prevention programs, would 
that help us or hurt us in our effort to maintain a competitive 
advantage over China when it comes to the quality of our 
personnel?
    Dr. Lin. I think it would definitely hurt us. Having worked 
with many military officers, I know how difficult it is to be 
able to sacrifice for the Nation while also taking care of 
needs at home. So without that, without the U.S. Government 
helping them with their child care, the home portion, I think 
it makes their day jobs much more difficult.
    Senator Warren. Good, and I see our other witnesses both 
nodding yes as well. Do I take it you both agreed on this?
    Dr. Hill. We certainly do, and look, we can see the 
performance of the Russian military at this moment is a case in 
point, a country that does not care about the quality of its 
personnel, only the quantity that can be thrown at the 
battlefield. All of the issues that you have just raised are 
one of the reasons why Russia has not been performing as we 
might have expected.
    Senator Warren. You know--go ahead, Mr. Zakheim.
    Mr. Zakheim. I completely agree, Senator Warren. One of the 
things this committee does annually when they report out the 
defense authorization bill, what it has done for the men and 
women in uniform, I think that is the example and why we are 
able to realize these benefits.
    Senator Warren. Yes. I raised this today in this context 
because some Republicans want to cut programs that support our 
troops and our military families. They talk about fiscal 
responsibility, but I see two big problems.
    First, anyone who is using a debate over the Nation's debt 
limit to crash our economy in order to extract massive spending 
cuts is being reckless, not responsible. Second, make no 
mistake, the same folks who claim to care about the size of the 
Pentagon budget will continue to get a blank check for weapons 
programs that go to billions of dollars of cost and not to our 
personnel.
    The Pentagon funding these Republicans want to cut is the 
part that goes to safe housing and medical care for our troops. 
I get it. There is plenty of waste to cut in the Pentagon's 
budget, but programs that support our troops and inspire them 
to continue to put their lives on the line for our country 
aren't waste. They protect our greatest strength as a Nation, 
our people. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
    Chairman Reed. Thank you, Senator Warren. Senator Wicker, 
you have additional questions, please.
    Senator Wicker. Right. I am going to take a short second 
round. You have all been extremely helpful and it has been a 
very informative but long two and a half hours for you, and I 
know you are anxious to get up. In terms of--Mr. Zakheim, in 
terms of our stake as American families in the Ukraine 
conflict.
    We have heard arguments, this is an assault on the global 
rules based order, that Russia has violated the U.N. chapter. 
It is a violation of international law. In addition, there is 
the 1994 agreement that the United States made when Ukraine 
gave up their nuclear weapons. There are going to be a lot of 
families who say, that is not enough for me. I am trying to get 
my kids ready for college.
    My spouse and I both work. I am furious about the border. 
Inflation is killing me. Why should any--why should my tax 
dollars--that doesn't affect me and my family where I live, 
that we are so interested in in Ukraine defeating Russia in 
this. What is our stake?
    Mr. Zakheim. Thank you, Senator Wicker. I think the 
response is let's not be pennywise and pound foolish. Ukraine 
winning means that we do not have a broader armed conflict in 
Europe. History is clear, the cost to America with a war on the 
continent could be so consequential, it takes over the entire 
country in the form of some world war like effort.
    That is the difference, in my judgment, between allowing 
Vladimir Putin and his revanchist ambitions to have whatever 
they want in Europe versus not putting a single United States 
boot on the ground, investing in the Ukrainians along with our 
allies, to allow them to do essentially our work for us, that 
is to defeat an adversary.
    Senator Wicker. So it is going to save that family tax 
money down the road?
    Mr. Zakheim. Potentially lives, Senator.
    Senator Wicker. Dr. Hill.
    Dr. Hill. I agree completely with Mr. Zakheim about this as 
well, and Senator Cotton, while he was opening up for his 
question, invoked Winston Churchill. This August buddy had 
debates about whether the United States should continue to 
support the United Kingdom before the United States entry into 
World War II back in the period from 1939 to 1941, in fact.
    Senator Wicker. Indeed, it was controversial.
    Dr. Hill. Exactly. So I think it is the same kind of debate 
about the knock on effects for all of us, and just one issue 
about the borders. The kinds of attacks that Russia has made on 
another country and its borders lead to more refugees and 
migrants. We have seen that.
    In fact, we do have Russians, Ukrainians, and others coming 
over the Southern border who have taken roundabout routes to 
get here. We are now going to face on a global scale more of 
these kinds of violations. We have got a massive refugee and 
migration problem across the entire globe. Climate change is 
going to exacerbate this. We are going to be dealing with 
problems on the border from----
    Senator Wicker. I have to hurry. Mr. Zakheim, you make a 
point that one of the worst wastes of money being pound foolish 
is a CR, a continuing resolution. Would you explain why that 
is?
    Mr. Zakheim. Thank you, and thank you for giving a chance. 
I didn't get to your reform question earlier. This Congress is 
all about how you deal with waste and inefficiency in 
Department of Defense enterprise of $100 billion with the 
Congress year over year.
    I know this is not the choice of this committee, but going 
on a CR, not allowing that the budget that the Department of 
Defense has requested to be executed, and forcing them, boxing 
them in their previous year's request, it raises inefficiency 
where you are spending money, authorize and appropriated funds 
in things that the Congress doesn't want them to spend on, the 
Department of Defense doesn't want them to spend on, all 
because of this larger context has happened for decades, year 
over year.
    The exception is when we don't have a CR and it translates 
into tens of billions of dollars annually of inefficient 
spending of taxpayer money, sir.
    Senator Wicker. One other thing. It seems to me the Russian 
offensive of this late winter has bogged down and is not likely 
to succeed any further. Would you comment on that?
    Mr. Zakheim. I think that is still a question. It is 
certainly hasn't proceeded at the pace that Vladimir Putin 
would have liked, but as Dr. Hill and others pointed out, Putin 
keeps on putting people, personnel, and capability forward.
    What the Ukrainians need is the ability to strike through 
it and attack it from the rear, if I understand from military 
professionals, and they don't have that capability right now. 
It risks allowing the Russians to advance inch by inch, foot by 
foot. Vladimir Putin has the patience, so far, the ability, to 
do just that.
    Senator Wicker. Thank you all. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
    Chairman Reed. Thank you, Senator Wicker. I want to thank 
the panel for an excellent hearing and presentation and commend 
you for your work. Thank you very, very much. With that, let me 
call this hearing to be adjourned.
    [Whereupon, at 12:13 p.m., the Committee adjourned.]

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