Use Seabees for Stability Operations

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Use Seabees for Stability Operations | Proceedings - July 2010 Vol. 136/7/1,289 Jul. 1st, 2010

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Since World War II, Naval Mobile Construction Battalions (NMCBs or Seabees) have supported the Navy's combat mission and promoted goodwill through construction projects. In 2005 then-Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld challenged all military services to adapt existing capabilities to advance "U.S. interests and values." Chief of Naval Operations Admiral Gary Roughead responded in 2007 with A Cooperative Strategy for 21st Century Seapower, directing the Navy to deter war and encourage international stability by nonconventional means including economic development, governance, and establishing the rule of law in developing and war-torn countries. Although the Navy does not have oďŹƒcial stability-operations doctrine, the CNO has recognized that we must step beyond our blue-water role to embrace 21st-century counterinsurgency and state-building challenges. This is a made-to-order Seabee mission. The Department of Defense understands that stability operations are too complex and costly to be left exclusively to the armed forces: "Integrated civilian and military eorts are key to successful stability operations, [and the military] shall be prepared to work closely with . . . U.S. Departments and Agencies."1 Some may argue that stability, security, transition, and reconstruction (SSTR) is not the military's role. But the military has always performed this mission. It is at present carrying out this mission, and other agencies are poorly resourced to take the lead on it.


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