Air Force photo

A New Jersey National Guard sergeant trains an Albanian officer candidate on a machinegun.

The United States has a low-key, low-cost tool to build relationships with friendly militaries around the world. But after 27 years of success, the State Partnership Program – originally created for post-Cold War Europe – needs a review to ensure it is optimized for Washington’s current national security needs.

Why does SPP matter? With threats growing and budgets under pressure from COVID-19, the Pentagon needs a cost-efficient way to build stronger relationships and military capacity with partner nations in each combatant command. Ideally, this approach would not place additional burdens on the active duty U.S. military and would operate largely below the radar of America’s adversaries and competitors.

That is where the SPP excels. But the program is overdue for a strategic assessment to ensure it is appropriately resourced and properly focused on the objectives of the National Defense Strategy, which refocuses the US military from counterinsurgency to strategic competition against Russia and China.

The program was created in a very different era, when the U.S. had a very different relationship with both Russia and China. The Pentagon established the SPP in 1993 to create constructive relationships between state National Guards and the newly independent countries of the former Soviet Union. For example, the Maryland, Michigan, and Pennsylvania National Guards established programs with Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania, respectively.

This enabled National Guard citizen-soldiers and airmen to build the military capacity of partner countries. This use of reserve-component personnel was less prone to catch Moscow’s attention or incite an unwelcome over-reaction from the Kremlin.

National Guard Bureau graphic

Nations participating in the National Guard’s State Partnership Program (SPP). (82 nations are listed; seven other nations that participate in multi-nation partnerships are not shown).

Meanwhile, the program incrementally built partner capacity and interoperability, while productive long-term relationships took root. Junior enlisted personnel and young officers who first met their European counterparts in the 1990s are now sergeant majors and colonels. Two and a half decades of trust have been built with frontline allies. That is as important as it is difficult to measure.

In recent years, the Michigan National Guard has been helping to train Latvian joint terminal attack controllers—directly improving Latvian close air support capabilities. The commander of U.S. European Command, General Tod Wolters, praised the work of the Michigan National Guard in improving its partners’ “air-land integration” and noted that Guard members help arriving NATO military training teams “reintegrate at a much faster pace.”

Based on the initial success of SPP in Europe in the 1990s, the Pentagon expanded the program in the intervening years to the Middle East, Central and South America, and the Indo-Pacific.

Now, there are programs with 89 nations around the globe.

Today, for example, nearly every country in Southern Command’s area of responsibility participates in the SPP. In fact, the commander of SOUTHCOM, Admiral Craig Faller, sings the SPP’s praises. “It is a game-changer for us,” Faller said during a congressional hearing earlier this year. “Most of our exercise support for our major exercises comes from State Partnerships, and that is something that we depend on as our force provider.”

But there is room for improvement.

In response to a congressional directive, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) conducted a review of the SPP in 2012. GAO identified a number of findings and recommendations that required the Pentagon’s attention. Among other things, GAO found that the SPP “lacks a comprehensive oversight framework that includes clear program goals, objectives, and metrics to measure progress against those goals.”

Notably, the Pentagon concurred with all of GAO’s findings and recommendations. Yet GAO subsequently assessed that the strategic plan issued in 2016 still did “not lay out specific goals or metrics for measuring the success” of the SPP.

National Guard Bureau photo

Bosnian troops train with soldiers of the Maryland National Guard

Accordingly, a new review of the SPP is needed.

Does a comprehensive oversight framework now exist? Are there clear goals, objectives, metrics, and milestones? Based on those, how are individual programs performing, and are they fully aligned with the National Defense Strategy?

In the meantime, the Pentagon needs to update the Department of Defense Instruction (DODI) governing the SPP. The most recent DODI went into effect in October 2016—before the publication of the NDS and recent changes in the National Defense Authorization Act.

Members of Congress should also consider whether the SPP has the necessary funding and statutory authority. To support the NDS, should new programs be established, for example, in Japan, Australia, India, or Singapore? While a full-fledged SPP might not be appropriate yet for Taiwan, perhaps National Guard advisors or small units from a number of states could help the Taiwanese build military capacity and readiness.

Wherever there is an SPP, there should be a National Guard bilateral affairs officer in the respective U.S. embassy. That would help ensure SPP activities in the country most effectively support the U.S. integrated country strategy and foreign policy objectives.

In the effort to effectively implement the National Defense Strategy, Washington has a great asset in the State Partnership Program. With some refinements, it can be even better.

 

Bradley Bowman is senior director of the Center on Military and Political Power (CMPP) at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD), where Maj. Thomas G. Pledger is a visiting military analyst. Views expressed or implied in this commentary are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the views of the U.S. Army, the National Guard Bureau, the Defense Department, or any other U.S. government agency.