109. Memorandum From the Secretary of Defense (Wilson) to the Executive Secretary of the National Security Council (Lay)1
Washington, February 25,
1957.
SUBJECT
- Basic Military Planning Concept to Govern Planning and Development of the Mobilization Base
- 1.
- NSC Action No. 1503–b noted the President’s request that the Secretary of Defense together with the Joint Chiefs of Staff make a thorough analysis and report on the basic military planning concept which should govern the planning and development of the mobilization base.2
- 2.
- I believe that the new strategic concept (Appendix A), prepared by the Joint Chiefs of Staff and approved by me, provides the basic military planning concept which should govern the planning and development of the U.S. mobilization base. This strategic concept provides for two military eventualities: (a) cold war or military conflict short of general war and (b) general war, initiated with an atomic [Page 420] onslaught by the Soviets or as a result of hostilities which were not initially intended to lead to general war. The U.S. mobilization base must be fully responsive to these eventualities.
- 3.
- The introduction of atomic weapons into the military arsenal, and the change which these weapons have made in our strategic concepts of war, dictate a change in logistic planning. In the past, emphasis has been placed on the capability of our industrial facilities to expand for support of our forces in time of war. Our capability of expanding our industrial capabilities was, in fact, an essential element in our U.S. mobilization base. Our experience in past wars made it possible for us to forecast military requirements over an extended period. We were able to economize in times of peace by producing and stockpiling only those military supplies which would be required in war before industrial production could meet the demand. Our time and space advantages were the keys which permitted this type of mobilization planning.
- 4.
- The present concept concerning the initiation of a general war by a surprise atomic attack eliminates, for all practical purposes, the effect of our previous time and space advantages from mobilization planning. Our concept of the U.S. mobilization base, as related to potential industrial expansion after war commences, must be brought into agreement with this particular aspect of the strategic concept. Pre-D-day planning for mobilization will improve our capabilities to conduct general war. Our U.S. mobilization base should continue to provide for possible peripheral wars both with and without direct participation by U.S. forces. We must develop logistic objectives that are in consonance with our concepts of general war which will restore to the maximum the advantage previously afforded by time and space factors of our geography.
- 5.
- In consonance with our strategic concept (Appendix A) and Basic
National Security Policy, the U.S. mobilization base should at this
time be so planned and developed that for both general war and
conflict short of general war it will:
- a.
- Maintain the active forces in a condition of optimum readiness to execute initial wartime missions.
- b.
- Maintain and support selected reserve forces in a condition of high readiness.
- c.
- Maintain and support the phased expansion to the M + 6 months force levels.
- d.
- Have the capacity to meet the combat requirements of all forces which would be mobilized by M+6 months.
- e.
- Provide pre-D-day stocks of selected supplies and equipment outside the United States reasonably protected to insure that those forces surviving the enemy atomic attack will have a reasonable capability of performing assigned initial tasks effectively despite substantial interruption of resupply from the United States during the initial phase of war.
- 6.
-
In summary the U.S. mobilization base should be predicated on a military planning concept for meeting two distinctively different mobilization problems:
- a.
- Conflict without damage to the U.S. production base.
- b.
- Conflict characterized by atomic attack on the U.S.
Therefore, mobilization planning must be designed to meet the different eventualities outlined above with emphasis on those elements that will increase our D-day readiness and capability.
- 7.
- Your attention is invited to the fact that, for military planning purposes, the strategic concept provides that in military operations short of general war atomic weapons will be used when required in order to achieve military objectives (Appendix A—para. 2–f, page 8). It is understood, of course, that the actual use of these weapons in such a contingency is dependent upon Presidential authorization as set forth in para. 11 of Basic National Security Policy (NSC 5602/1).3
- 8.
- It is requested that this memorandum and Appendix A be given a special limited distribution and that the contents be subject to special security precautions with access limited to those individuals having a strict “need-to-know”.
C.E.
Wilson4
- Source: Department of State, PPS Files: Lot 67 D 548, Military and Naval Policy. Top Secret. Attached to a memorandum from Gleason to the NSC, dated March 1, not printed.↩
- Regarding NSC Action No. 1503, see footnote 5, Document 52.↩
- Document 66.↩
- Printed from a copy that bears this typed signature.↩