fbpx
Wikipedia

Goldwater–Nichols Act

The Goldwater–Nichols Department of Defense Reorganization Act of October 4, 1986 (Pub. L. 99–433; signed by President Ronald Reagan) made the most sweeping changes to the United States Department of Defense since the department was established in the National Security Act of 1947 by reworking the command structure of the U.S. military. It increased the powers of the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and implemented some of the suggestions from the Packard Commission, commissioned by President Reagan in 1985. Among other changes, Goldwater–Nichols streamlined the military chain of command, which now runs from the president through the secretary of defense directly to combatant commanders (CCDRs, all four-star generals or admirals), bypassing the service chiefs. The service chiefs were assigned to an advisory role to the president and the secretary of defense, and given the responsibility for training and equipping personnel for the unified combatant commands.

Goldwater–Nichols Department of Defense Reorganization Act of 1986
Long titleTo reorganize the Department of Defense and strengthen civilian authority in the Department of Defense, to improve the military advice provided to the President, the National Security Council, and the Secretary of Defense, to place clear responsibility on the commanders of the unified and specified combatant commands for the accomplishment of missions assigned to those commands and ensure that the authority of those commanders is fully commensurate with that responsibility, to increase attention to the formulation of strategy and to contingency planning, to provide for more efficient use of defense resources, to improve joint officer management policies, otherwise to enhance the effectiveness of military operations and improve the management and administration of the Department of Defense, and for other purposes.
Enacted bythe 99th United States Congress
Citations
Public law99-433
Statutes at Large100 Stat. 992
Legislative history
Sen. Barry Goldwater (RAZ) and Rep. William Flynt Nichols (DAL-4), the co-sponsors of the Goldwater–Nichols Act of 1986.

Named after Senator Barry Goldwater (R-Arizona) and Representative William Flynt "Bill" Nichols (D-Alabama), the bill passed the House of Representatives, 383–27, and the Senate, 95–0. It was signed into law by President Reagan on October 1, 1986. Admiral William J. Crowe was the first chairman to serve under this new legislation.

History edit

The Goldwater–Nichols Act was an attempt to fix problems caused by inter-service rivalry, which had emerged during the Vietnam War, contributed to the catastrophic failure of the Iranian hostage rescue mission in 1980, and which were still evident in the invasion of Grenada in 1983.[1][2]

Such problems existed as well in World War II, during which two independent lines of command flowed from the president, one through the secretary of the Navy to naval forces, and the other through the secretary of war to land and air forces. In 1947, the military restructuring placed all military forces, including the newly independent Air Force, under a single civilian secretary of defense.

However, the United States military was still organized along the lines of command that reported to their respective service chiefs (Commandant of the Marine Corps, Chiefs of Staff of the Army and Air Force, and Chief of Naval Operations). These service chiefs in turn made up the Joint Chiefs of Staff. The Joint Chiefs of Staff elected a chairman to communicate with the civilian government. The chairman of the Joint Chiefs in turn reported to the secretary of defense, the civilian head of the military. Both the chairman of the Joint Chiefs and the secretary of defense reported to the president of the United States who holds the position of Commander-in-Chief (CINC) of all U.S. Armed Forces.

This system led to counter-productive inter-service rivalry. Peacetime activities (such as procurement and creation of doctrine, etc.) were tailored for each service in isolation. Additionally, wartime activities of each service were largely planned, executed, and evaluated independently. These practices resulted in division of effort and an inability to profit from economies of scale, and inhibited the development of modern warfare doctrine.

The formulation of the AirLand Battle doctrine in the late 1970s and early 1980s laid bare the difficulty of coordinating efforts among various service branches. AirLand Battle attempted to synthesize all of the capabilities of the service arms of the military into a single doctrine. The system envisioned ground, naval, air, and space based systems acting in concert to attack and defeat an opponent in depth. The structure of the armed forces effectively blocked realization of this ideal. The U.S. invasion of Grenada in 1983 further exposed the problems with the military command structure. Although the United States forces easily prevailed, its leaders expressed major concerns over different service branches' inability to coordinate and communicate with each other and the consequences of a lack of coordination if faced with a more threatening foe.

Effects edit

The Goldwater–Nichols Act brought sweeping changes to the way the U.S. military forces were organized. The first successful test of Goldwater–Nichols was the 1989 United States invasion of Panama (code-named Operation Just Cause), where it functioned exactly as planned, allowing the U.S. commander, Army General Maxwell Reid Thurman, to exercise full control over Marine Corps, Army, Air Force and Navy assets without having to negotiate with the individual services.

Chain of command and military advice edit

Under the Goldwater–Nichols Act, military advice was centralized in the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff as opposed to the service chiefs. The chairman was designated as the principal military adviser to the president of the United States, National Security Council and Secretary of Defense. The act also established the position of vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and simplified the chain of command. Additionally, the act states that the chairman and vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff cannot be representatives from the same service branch. It increased the ability of the chairman to direct overall strategy, but provided greater command authority to "unified" and "specified" field commanders. According to the act, the chairman may not exercise military command over the Joint Chiefs of Staff or any of the armed forces.[3]

Section 162(b) of the act prescribes that "unless otherwise directed by the president, the chain of command to a unified or specified combatant command runs—

  1. "from the president to the secretary of defense," and
  2. "from the secretary of defense to the commander of the combatant command".[4]

Interaction of services edit

Goldwater–Nichols changed the way the services interact. The services themselves "organize, train and equip" forces for use by the combatant commanders (CCDRs), and the service chiefs no longer exercise any operational control over their forces. Rather than reporting to a service chief operationally, the service component forces support the commander responsible for a specific function (special operations, strategic, transportation, cyber) or a geographic region of the globe (Northern, Central, European, Pacific, Southern, and Africa Commands). The combatant commanders then field a force capable of employing AirLand Battle doctrine (or its successors) using all assets available to the integrated unified action plan, including the military, interagency organizations of the US Government such as USAID and the Department of State, and intelligence agencies. The restructuring afforded a combination of effort, integrated planning, shared procurement, and a reduction or elimination of inter-service rivalry. It also provided unity of command, conforming with leading military science. Individual services changed from relatively autonomous war-fighting entities into organizational and training units, responsible for acquisition, modernization, force-development, and readiness as a component of the integrated force. Thus USCENTCOM (U.S. Central Command), for example, would be assigned air, ground, naval, Marine, and special operations assets to achieve its objectives, not the previously less efficient method of individual services planning, supporting, and fighting the same war. This was successfully demonstrated during Operation Desert Storm in 1991.

Personnel management of officers edit

Another major effect of the Act is the way it has dramatically changed the personnel management of military officers.[5] Many officers are assigned to joint duty positions (occasionally more than once), and are educated in Department of Defense Joint Professional Military Education (JPME) schools as part of their career development and progression. For example, in order to be competitive for promotion to general or flag officer (admiral) (pay grade O-7 or above/NATO OF-6), active component colonels (pay grade O-6/NATO OF-5) (Army, Marine Corps, and Air Force) or Navy captains must have completed at least one joint duty assignment, as well as having completed (or currently be enrolled in) a JPME school that grants JPME Level II credit.[6]

Shared procurement edit

Shared procurement allowed the various branches to share technological advances such as stealth and smart weapons quickly, and provided other ancillary benefits (such as improved interoperability of radios and communications between units and members of different services). Joint implementation of new technology allowed for joint development of supporting doctrine. The Goldwater–Nichols Act could be seen as the initial step of the currently ongoing Revolution in Military Affairs (RMA) with its concept of Network Centric Warfare (NCW).

Changes since 1986 edit

On October 24, 2002, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld ordered that the functional and regional commanders be referred to not as "CINCs" but as "combatant commanders" when applied to "unified" regional organizations (e.g., USCENTCOM), or "commander" when talking about "specified" units such as the U.S. Strategic Command (USSTRATCOM). Rumsfeld said the term "CINC" was inappropriate, notwithstanding its employment for many decades, because under the United States Constitution, the president is the Nation's only Commander-in-Chief. His decision was described as intending to clarify and strengthen the military's subordination to civilian government.[7]

On November 10, 2015, Senator John McCain announced at a hearing of the Senate Armed Services Committee, the beginning of a new effort to "reconsider, and possibly update" Goldwater–Nichols.[8]

On January 4, 2016, the deputy secretary of defense issued a memorandum directing an internal review with the objective "to make recommendations for updates or adjustments to organizational relationships and authorities" based on 30 years of experience under Goldwater–Nichols.[9]

On April 5, 2016, Defense Secretary Ash Carter outlined reforms in a speech at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.[10]

References edit

  1. ^ Cole, Ronald H. (1999). "Grenada, Panama, and Haiti: Joint Operational Reform" (PDF). Joint Force Quarterly (20 (Autumn/Winter 1998-99)): 57–74. (PDF) from the original on March 27, 2020. Retrieved October 20, 2017.
  2. ^ Richard W. Stewart, ed. (2005). . American Military History, Volume II. United States Army Center of Military History. Archived from the original on May 18, 2015. Retrieved December 1, 2008.
  3. ^ Section 152c of the Act.
  4. ^ Goldwater–Nicholls DOD Reorganization Act, 10 USC 162, Combatant Commands; Assigned Forces; Chain of Command, Section (b), Chain of Command.
  5. ^ "U.S.C. Title 10 - ARMED FORCES". www.gpo.gov.
  6. ^ "10 U.S. Code § 2155 - Joint professional military education Phase II program of instruction". LII / Legal Information Institute.
  7. ^ Garamone, Jim (October 25, 2002). . defenselink.mil. American Forces Press Service. Archived from the original on August 7, 2020. Retrieved November 20, 2016.
  8. ^ "Hearing to Receive Testimony on 30 Years of Goldwater-Nichols Reform" (PDF). Alderson Reporting Company. November 10, 2015. Retrieved January 12, 2016.
  9. ^ "Review of the Organization and Responsibilities of the DoD" (PDF). Inside Defense. January 4, 2016. Retrieved January 12, 2016.
  10. ^ "Breaking New Ground: Preparing DoD for the Future with Secretary Ash Carter [Transcript]" (PDF). Center for Strategic and International Studies. April 5, 2016. Retrieved November 24, 2019.

Sources edit

  • Bourne, Chistopher. "Unintended Consequences of the Goldwater–Nichols Act". JFQ (Spring 1998) 99–108. Argues it gives too much power to the chairman.
  • Kamarck, Kristy N. Goldwater-Nichols and the Evolution of Officer Joint Professional Military Education (JPME). Congressional Research Service. 2016.
  • Lederman, Gordon Nathaniel; Reorganizing the Joint Chiefs of Staff: The Goldwater–Nichols Act of 1986 (Greenwood Press, 1999) online.
  • Locher, James R. "Transformative Leadership on Capitol Hill: The Goldwater-Nichols Defense Reorganization Act," in Bradley Lynn Coleman, Kyle Longley, eds. Reagan and the World: Leadership and National Security (2017) ch 4.
  • Locher, James R.; Victory on the Potomac: The Goldwater–Nichols Act Unifies the Pentagon. Texas A & M University Press, 2002. 524 pp. ISBN 1-58544-187-2 excerpt and text search
  • McInnis, Kathleen J. Goldwater-Nichols at 30: Defense Reform and Issues for Congress. Congressional Research Service. 2016.
  • Wills, Steven T. "Navy and Marine Corps Opposition to the Goldwater Nichols Act of 1986", Ohio University, 2012

External links edit

goldwater, nichols, goldwater, nichols, department, defense, reorganization, october, 1986, signed, president, ronald, reagan, made, most, sweeping, changes, united, states, department, defense, since, department, established, national, security, 1947, reworki. The Goldwater Nichols Department of Defense Reorganization Act of October 4 1986 Pub L 99 433 signed by President Ronald Reagan made the most sweeping changes to the United States Department of Defense since the department was established in the National Security Act of 1947 by reworking the command structure of the U S military It increased the powers of the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and implemented some of the suggestions from the Packard Commission commissioned by President Reagan in 1985 Among other changes Goldwater Nichols streamlined the military chain of command which now runs from the president through the secretary of defense directly to combatant commanders CCDRs all four star generals or admirals bypassing the service chiefs The service chiefs were assigned to an advisory role to the president and the secretary of defense and given the responsibility for training and equipping personnel for the unified combatant commands Goldwater Nichols Department of Defense Reorganization Act of 1986Long titleTo reorganize the Department of Defense and strengthen civilian authority in the Department of Defense to improve the military advice provided to the President the National Security Council and the Secretary of Defense to place clear responsibility on the commanders of the unified and specified combatant commands for the accomplishment of missions assigned to those commands and ensure that the authority of those commanders is fully commensurate with that responsibility to increase attention to the formulation of strategy and to contingency planning to provide for more efficient use of defense resources to improve joint officer management policies otherwise to enhance the effectiveness of military operations and improve the management and administration of the Department of Defense and for other purposes Enacted bythe 99th United States CongressCitationsPublic law99 433Statutes at Large100 Stat 992Legislative historyIntroduced in the House as H R 3622 by William Flynt Nichols D AL on October 24 1985Committee consideration by United States House Committee on Armed ServicesPassed the House on November 20 1985 383 27 Passed the Senate on May 5 1986 95 0 Signed into law by President Ronald Reagan on October 1 1986Sen Barry Goldwater R AZ and Rep William Flynt Nichols D AL 4 the co sponsors of the Goldwater Nichols Act of 1986 Named after Senator Barry Goldwater R Arizona and Representative William Flynt Bill Nichols D Alabama the bill passed the House of Representatives 383 27 and the Senate 95 0 It was signed into law by President Reagan on October 1 1986 Admiral William J Crowe was the first chairman to serve under this new legislation Contents 1 History 2 Effects 2 1 Chain of command and military advice 2 2 Interaction of services 2 3 Personnel management of officers 2 4 Shared procurement 3 Changes since 1986 4 References 4 1 Sources 5 External linksHistory editThe Goldwater Nichols Act was an attempt to fix problems caused by inter service rivalry which had emerged during the Vietnam War contributed to the catastrophic failure of the Iranian hostage rescue mission in 1980 and which were still evident in the invasion of Grenada in 1983 1 2 Such problems existed as well in World War II during which two independent lines of command flowed from the president one through the secretary of the Navy to naval forces and the other through the secretary of war to land and air forces In 1947 the military restructuring placed all military forces including the newly independent Air Force under a single civilian secretary of defense However the United States military was still organized along the lines of command that reported to their respective service chiefs Commandant of the Marine Corps Chiefs of Staff of the Army and Air Force and Chief of Naval Operations These service chiefs in turn made up the Joint Chiefs of Staff The Joint Chiefs of Staff elected a chairman to communicate with the civilian government The chairman of the Joint Chiefs in turn reported to the secretary of defense the civilian head of the military Both the chairman of the Joint Chiefs and the secretary of defense reported to the president of the United States who holds the position of Commander in Chief CINC of all U S Armed Forces This system led to counter productive inter service rivalry Peacetime activities such as procurement and creation of doctrine etc were tailored for each service in isolation Additionally wartime activities of each service were largely planned executed and evaluated independently These practices resulted in division of effort and an inability to profit from economies of scale and inhibited the development of modern warfare doctrine The formulation of the AirLand Battle doctrine in the late 1970s and early 1980s laid bare the difficulty of coordinating efforts among various service branches AirLand Battle attempted to synthesize all of the capabilities of the service arms of the military into a single doctrine The system envisioned ground naval air and space based systems acting in concert to attack and defeat an opponent in depth The structure of the armed forces effectively blocked realization of this ideal The U S invasion of Grenada in 1983 further exposed the problems with the military command structure Although the United States forces easily prevailed its leaders expressed major concerns over different service branches inability to coordinate and communicate with each other and the consequences of a lack of coordination if faced with a more threatening foe Effects editThe Goldwater Nichols Act brought sweeping changes to the way the U S military forces were organized The first successful test of Goldwater Nichols was the 1989 United States invasion of Panama code named Operation Just Cause where it functioned exactly as planned allowing the U S commander Army General Maxwell Reid Thurman to exercise full control over Marine Corps Army Air Force and Navy assets without having to negotiate with the individual services Chain of command and military advice edit Under the Goldwater Nichols Act military advice was centralized in the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff as opposed to the service chiefs The chairman was designated as the principal military adviser to the president of the United States National Security Council and Secretary of Defense The act also established the position of vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and simplified the chain of command Additionally the act states that the chairman and vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff cannot be representatives from the same service branch It increased the ability of the chairman to direct overall strategy but provided greater command authority to unified and specified field commanders According to the act the chairman may not exercise military command over the Joint Chiefs of Staff or any of the armed forces 3 Section 162 b of the act prescribes that unless otherwise directed by the president the chain of command to a unified or specified combatant command runs from the president to the secretary of defense and from the secretary of defense to the commander of the combatant command 4 Interaction of services edit Goldwater Nichols changed the way the services interact The services themselves organize train and equip forces for use by the combatant commanders CCDRs and the service chiefs no longer exercise any operational control over their forces Rather than reporting to a service chief operationally the service component forces support the commander responsible for a specific function special operations strategic transportation cyber or a geographic region of the globe Northern Central European Pacific Southern and Africa Commands The combatant commanders then field a force capable of employing AirLand Battle doctrine or its successors using all assets available to the integrated unified action plan including the military interagency organizations of the US Government such as USAID and the Department of State and intelligence agencies The restructuring afforded a combination of effort integrated planning shared procurement and a reduction or elimination of inter service rivalry It also provided unity of command conforming with leading military science Individual services changed from relatively autonomous war fighting entities into organizational and training units responsible for acquisition modernization force development and readiness as a component of the integrated force Thus USCENTCOM U S Central Command for example would be assigned air ground naval Marine and special operations assets to achieve its objectives not the previously less efficient method of individual services planning supporting and fighting the same war This was successfully demonstrated during Operation Desert Storm in 1991 Personnel management of officers edit Another major effect of the Act is the way it has dramatically changed the personnel management of military officers 5 Many officers are assigned to joint duty positions occasionally more than once and are educated in Department of Defense Joint Professional Military Education JPME schools as part of their career development and progression For example in order to be competitive for promotion to general or flag officer admiral pay grade O 7 or above NATO OF 6 active component colonels pay grade O 6 NATO OF 5 Army Marine Corps and Air Force or Navy captains must have completed at least one joint duty assignment as well as having completed or currently be enrolled in a JPME school that grants JPME Level II credit 6 Shared procurement edit Shared procurement allowed the various branches to share technological advances such as stealth and smart weapons quickly and provided other ancillary benefits such as improved interoperability of radios and communications between units and members of different services Joint implementation of new technology allowed for joint development of supporting doctrine The Goldwater Nichols Act could be seen as the initial step of the currently ongoing Revolution in Military Affairs RMA with its concept of Network Centric Warfare NCW Changes since 1986 editOn October 24 2002 Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld ordered that the functional and regional commanders be referred to not as CINCs but as combatant commanders when applied to unified regional organizations e g USCENTCOM or commander when talking about specified units such as the U S Strategic Command USSTRATCOM Rumsfeld said the term CINC was inappropriate notwithstanding its employment for many decades because under the United States Constitution the president is the Nation s only Commander in Chief His decision was described as intending to clarify and strengthen the military s subordination to civilian government 7 On November 10 2015 Senator John McCain announced at a hearing of the Senate Armed Services Committee the beginning of a new effort to reconsider and possibly update Goldwater Nichols 8 On January 4 2016 the deputy secretary of defense issued a memorandum directing an internal review with the objective to make recommendations for updates or adjustments to organizational relationships and authorities based on 30 years of experience under Goldwater Nichols 9 On April 5 2016 Defense Secretary Ash Carter outlined reforms in a speech at the Center for Strategic and International Studies 10 References edit Cole Ronald H 1999 Grenada Panama and Haiti Joint Operational Reform PDF Joint Force Quarterly 20 Autumn Winter 1998 99 57 74 Archived PDF from the original on March 27 2020 Retrieved October 20 2017 Richard W Stewart ed 2005 Chapter 12 Rebuilding the Army Vietnam to Desert Storm American Military History Volume II United States Army Center of Military History Archived from the original on May 18 2015 Retrieved December 1 2008 Section 152c of the Act Goldwater Nicholls DOD Reorganization Act 10 USC 162 Combatant Commands Assigned Forces Chain of Command Section b Chain of Command U S C Title 10 ARMED FORCES www gpo gov 10 U S Code 2155 Joint professional military education Phase II program of instruction LII Legal Information Institute Garamone Jim October 25 2002 CINC Is Sunk defenselink mil American Forces Press Service Archived from the original on August 7 2020 Retrieved November 20 2016 Hearing to Receive Testimony on 30 Years of Goldwater Nichols Reform PDF Alderson Reporting Company November 10 2015 Retrieved January 12 2016 Review of the Organization and Responsibilities of the DoD PDF Inside Defense January 4 2016 Retrieved January 12 2016 Breaking New Ground Preparing DoD for the Future with Secretary Ash Carter Transcript PDF Center for Strategic and International Studies April 5 2016 Retrieved November 24 2019 Sources edit Bourne Chistopher Unintended Consequences of the Goldwater Nichols Act JFQ Spring 1998 99 108 Argues it gives too much power to the chairman Kamarck Kristy N Goldwater Nichols and the Evolution of Officer Joint Professional Military Education JPME Congressional Research Service 2016 Lederman Gordon Nathaniel Reorganizing the Joint Chiefs of Staff The Goldwater Nichols Act of 1986 Greenwood Press 1999 online Locher James R Transformative Leadership on Capitol Hill The Goldwater Nichols Defense Reorganization Act in Bradley Lynn Coleman Kyle Longley eds Reagan and the World Leadership and National Security 2017 ch 4 Locher James R Victory on the Potomac The Goldwater Nichols Act Unifies the Pentagon Texas A amp M University Press 2002 524 pp ISBN 1 58544 187 2 excerpt and text search McInnis Kathleen J Goldwater Nichols at 30 Defense Reform and Issues for Congress Congressional Research Service 2016 Wills Steven T Navy and Marine Corps Opposition to the Goldwater Nichols Act of 1986 Ohio University 2012External links editGoldwater Nichols Act of 1986 Archived January 2 2013 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Goldwater Nichols Act amp oldid 1169748755, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.