Thoroughly explain how Russia and China aren't peer militaries.
The problem with the phrase 'peer military' or variants thereof is that they are used too casually with the users having next to zero knowledge of the contexts behind the phrase.
When I was active duty, we have Professional Military Education (PME). We -- officers and enlisted -- have our respective institutions, such as Air University and the NCO Academy, and so on. We learned about history, a little bit of politics, leadership development, training, and employment of theories.
Here is one of the exercises we had for discussions...
Let us say that...
- There are three countries: America, Canada, and Mexico
- Each country have a 1,000 man army
- America have access to the seas but Canada and Mexico are landlocked
Let us say that one day, America invented the 'boat' and eventually can travel on the waters. Then America have a 'navy'.
In
ABSOLUTE terms, we can argue that militarily speaking America have no peers. But because Canada and Mexico are landlocked, the only branch that can wage war on either country is the army. This make it in
PRACTICAL terms, despite having a navy, America still have two military peers.
While the exercise is simplistic, it is much more sophisticated than using sheer numbers of weaponry and manpower to compare militaries which inevitably affects national policies and foreign affairs. A false or incomplete understanding of the idea of what is a 'military peer' and how to come to such a conclusion
WILL have disastrous consequences.
The exercise forced the student to take into consideration seemingly unrelated factors like politics, government, geography, economics, ethnic composition, societal strata, moralities and philosophies, and even lower level factors like ratio of men to women and lifespan expectancy to guesstimate the national potency of a country. This is why JPN is guesstimated to decline on the world stage because of the rising ratio of seniors to younger adults over the next 20 yrs. Like it or not, it is very much a dick measuring contest but one with serious international implications because the military is reflective of the greater society whence it came from.
Let us say that Canada is experiencing a birth boom. This mean that in 20 yrs time odds are good that Canada's economy will rise, and Canada will have a 1,500 man army which make it in
PRACTICAL terms, Canada's military will have no peer. America's navy remains useless.
But...But...What about the other day when USAF General Joe Schmoe on CNN said something about China's PLAAF being a 'near peer'?
The problem in that scenario is that people love to jump to conclusion on what General Schmoe said. When General Schmoe said that the PLAAF is a 'near peer', he actually meant it in a very narrow context, namely, that China can make her own aircraft, formulate her own air combat doctrines, trains her own airmen, and so on, without relying on external help. In a real fight against the USAF, the PLAAF would lose. The USAF would take losses, but those losses would not pose any statistical delay on the final victory over the PLAAF. In absolute and practical terms, US airpower from all branches grossly oversized the PLA, especially in combat experience.
The US military is unique in the modern world in the sense that we trains exclusively to fight on other lands. Continental US (CONUS) is effectively immune from invasion, and we have the National Guards to defend the homeland. That leave the main army an exclusively expeditionary force. When I used the lower case 'army', I do not mean the US Army but the totality of the US military. France's expeditionary force is the Foreign Legion, an example to illustrate the difference where an army may have a unit of any size that is dedicated for overseas missions versus an entire military that is formed and trained to do so. A component that is dedicated to expeditionary missions are mainly for harassment, reconnaissance, insurgency, or preparation to a larger force. Whereas an entire military that was formed to be expeditionary is meant for conquest and it will have the resources to back up the mission.
No one like to rated lower than the US military but reality give no options, so in theory, if one strains hard enough, Burkina Faso can be a US 'near peer'.