About earlier. And gallup historical trend, theres a fascinating chart gallup does called president ial Approval Ratings over time. One of the things that we see is that in the early part of modern polling basically the kennedy administration, the johnson administration, those president s came to office with sky high Approval Ratings, 75, 80 of americans approved. Then nixon and carter came and it was 65, and reagan came to office and it was 60 . Bottom line we have seen a long term decline of americans willing to give any new president the doubt ben 2 benefit of the doubt when they came in. Obama was 50, and thats better than president bush and clinton. But President Trump came in, never had a favorable approval rating, been in a very narrow range. And that is because we are so incredibly polarized that were simply not willing to give the benefit of the doubt. The democrat whose are running for president right now, the vast majority of them their favorable ratings are about what their unfavorable ratings are. That means that people arent even willing to wait to learn who they are. Simply the d after their name gives them that unfavorable edge. That is again a part of this crisis of confidence. We dont even have enough confidence in our leaders who we just elected to give them any kind of space to do anything because we simply pigeon hole them as definitely the two liberal democrats or two conservative republicans. I dont know how we get out of that but its something were going to deal with for a long time. Host you can following the reporting nation take you live to the Washington Convention center for a conversation on the upcoming military exercises in europe. The discussion is did by defense one the discussion is one. Hosted by defense good afternoon. Good afternoon. Hello, everyone. Good afternoon. Thank you so much or joining us today. There are a few seats up here if you would like to set. Otherwise, i encourage you to find a perch and we will get underway. I am the publisher here at defense one and it is my great pleasure to welcome you to another installment of cocktails and conversation. We are particularly thrilled to be here extending the conversation from the ausa annual meeting. Before we get the program underway, a few housekeeping items. If you have a cell phone, please silence them but do not put them away. We encourage you to be a part of the conversation and send your comments. Todays event will not be possible without the generous support of our underwriter. Please join me in thanking them let us do that. [applause] and with us today is our dear friend who with the director of Defense Intelligence solutions there and he will kick us off with a few opening remarks. Ben . Ben hello. I will keep this brief because i know it is not me you came to say. Q why so much for coming to this cocktails and conversation on this important and unable topic and very topical discussion we will have today. And there of the army very Relevant Missions in europe and based around the world, of course. Thise the underwriters of event because we think it is important to bring people together. To share drinks and food which is wonderful but it is also great to get together around a topic to have discussions, meet colleagues, and network. And hopefully have longlasting relationships beyond todays food and wine. We provide the geospatial visualization environment you use across the army to do analytic, understand the battle space. To understand everything from the readiness and where our troops are coming from and how to repair the battlefield. We have a long relationship with the army. If you would like to see more about what we do, there is a monitor in the back. Please feel free to come up at the end of the conversation to meet with representatives from our organization. And with that, im going to turn to introduceniela our panel and move forward with the content. Daniela i would like to invite our distinguished guests and our moderator to come and take a seat. While they assemble, i will introduce them. The commanding general of the u. S. Army europe. Director foreputy the transatlantic security initiative. And Lieutenant General jt thompson, commander of nato allied land command. Our panel will be led by patrick tucker. Thank you, all. [applause] moderator thank you, all for joining us today. I am patrick tucker. So pleased to have this Exceptional Panel here to discuss the future of the United States army in the incredibly important theater of the european theater. Differentn covering aspects of u. S. Army activity in europe for quite some time and there is one question that is usually a perfunctory question. There is rarely opportunity for news in it. This year that is not the case. I will go to you jt. I wonder if you could talk to me a little bit about the current status and your feelings about the military to military relationship with turkey. How is that right now . How quickly is that changing . Relationstain strong with my counterparts in turkey within the parameters of u. S. Policy at any given time. Going back and forth and visiting each other. We exchange units. The turkishhad first commando brigade and Company Train with us in germany and reciprocated with a company of paratroopers going to an exercise and turkey. That is not uncommon. I have turkish liaisons. All relations are driven by policy in the end but the military to military level in the european command and turkey, it is very solid. Patrick Washington Post a couple of days ago reported on change in the intelligence that the u. S. Military was providing in turkey around the operations they are conducting in northern syria. Any significant changes beyond those reported in the way youre dealing with your military counterparts in turkey . Jt i would not feel comfortable talking about that yet. Anytime we include intelligence in the sentence [laughter] changes in the last week beyond intelligence sharing . Also tricky. Turkey is a member of nato. Stoltenberg has made some comments recently trying to walk the delicate line as of course only a nato secretary can do. When you talk to your nato compatriots about what is going on right now, particularly turkey, what are they talking about . Nato allied land command is based in turkey. They are our host nation. Having this headquarters in turkey is important to them. A large majority of my staff is turkish. The thing we need to remember from a nato perspective is the contributions that turkey makes to nato. Second largest army contributing to operations in afghanistan and kosovo and bosnia. Operationstoday with my chief of staff is a turkish two star general. We are good friends and wes economy daily basis. Change ino notable our relationship. We are focused on our mission. What you asked me about are not nato operations and i stay in that box. Week,k over the past anything you can say in terms of how much more difficult it is to navigate that relationship with all of the stuff going on around it . We focus on nato activities so no change. We are both aware of what is going on. We both watched the media. But he is a new chief of staff and is focused on his job. Im leaving tomorrow, getting on a plane, and heading back into an exercise. Let me broaden that out a little bit too lauren. That on aard just now professional level we have to maintain those relationships. Difficults incredibly between these countries so how will that impact the future of nato Going Forward from your perspective at the council . Beyond the military to military relationship, there is sentiment at the political level. The Current Operations in syria are inflaming things further. In the context of the nato conversation, there is a question about core values that turkey is beginning to stray away from including democracy and rule of law. They are fundamental to the alliance. Degrade,you see those that opens the door to russian influence. Introduction and the exit from the f35 program will be a blow to operability. But that does not change the fact that it is in our interest to continue to work through these issues and at the end of the day, it is about the reliability of an ally. We have seen everything on the hill. Each from many. There has been talks about sanctions. And other things on turkey. But i think it comes down to how do we work towards maintaining and continuealogue this constructive relationship despite the troubles at the political level. Patrick there have not been any there has not been any major change in the openness of that dialogue from your perspective right now. Is that a fair characterization . Yes, we continue to talk and exchange views. Specifically looking at the european the european theater, is there a sense of what the end of this operation looks like for them . Is that something you have a window on right now . You think that is something would have to ask somebody else. Of things thatms we can ask, i would like to ask all of you about your questions. We will go to the audience during this and i would like to hear from all of you. Are people involved in thesionmaking and leading United States army in an incredibly important part of the world. At some point i will go out to you and we will have a microphone. Please annunciate where you are from and your affiliation and then we will get your question. Let me turn now to some of the exercises that have been announced that you are doing. Defender europe. A big exercise. I wonder if you can say what is the latest there . How are you preparing for that . What is the point of the exercise . The point is to practice the innforcement of u. S. Forces europe for the purposes of collective defense of the alliance. That is something that requires practice because you are moving large forces over big distances through complicated infrastructure and across a variety of Different National lines. It is the sort of thing that needs to be done in order to improve at an that is what we are doing. The army has led the way in practicing this reinforcement strategy in europe first but we will also do some work in the pacific. It will alternate years Going Forward. The biggestt is challenge in practicing this reinforcement across europe . The entire thing is a complex of small challenges that add up to a big one. We call it a strategic readiness. It ability to be strict ofa significant connection small things that have to go right in order for this to go well. That sounds like ordering french food in a restaurant. Hodges awith ben little while ago. One of the concerns that he brings up has to do with nato as well. The so walkiewaki corridor. Who was familiar with that . If you on cspan do not know what this is, it is a 40 mile stretch along the poland lithuanian border. On one side is an ally of russia and on the other is a big village riced lands sown that sticks out into europe rather conspicuously. And one big concern that a lot of europe military watchers have had going back a long time is that if you would be able to seize that area, that 40 mile strip, in theory you could cut lithuania,cements to latvia, and estonia. It is something that ben hodges thathaired a large report came out last year. How is nato looking at that challenge . I will start with you. Jt on the european continent, there is a lot of strategic terrain and the when you mentioned is very to strategic is very strategic. All of the countries involved in that area are very focused on it. In the 40 miles, 63 kilometers is a corridor. Some people call it a gap. We own the terrain there right now and we have to be able to defend it and plan accordingly before. We look at it the same way. It is a key terrain in europe. It is necessary to remain postured, ready, and agile to respond to any of the possible contingencies. Patrick is this something you are looking at, getting reinforcements there . Defendmain purpose of europe is to practice getting a force onto the other side of the atlantic from here so it can be deployed in any one of the friday of areas. Major take away is that it is not impossible to overcome a challenge in that area. Is a frank issue conversation we have within the alliance is that it will require taking up space in russia proper which is a difficult conversation to have with your allied but it is something that would have to be discussed. Patrick is it something that would be discussed . Is it something the exercise would look at . We would not talk about that in a forum like this. Patrick right. I have a few more questions. But first, any questions from you all as we get started . Sometimes, as these things progress, people have more wine and feel a little bit more courageous. [laughter] this man has already had wine. Ok. Jason and i am government contractor. You said the defender would be alternating from year to year. Is that to make sure that things are quickly acted upon . s to getn spin the aar the results quickly over the 24 months period . I dont think you would be surprised to learn there is an army wide approach to the aars. Function, topic by topic in terms of the structure and topics we are talking about. They have a Significant Program to collect a alliance wide lessons as well. I dont know how fast it will be. Keepck ok comic ruminating on your questions. As we talked, feel free to shoot up to her hand and we will get you incorporated. Zero fors been ground what has been called gray zone warfare. The area of conflict that falls just below largescale conflict and kind of falls in the category of strategic mischief. Taking all of the emails from a political candidate and dumping them all on wikileaks was an example of gray zone warfare as peoplentially poisoning working with your military in a foreign country. As in all misinformation and disinformation. The New York Times a little while ago published a really interesting report on a gau unit that has played a big role in the gray zone mischief that have happened across europe in recent years. Into thatg to get article per se but gray zone warfare is a big part of the future of the way warfare would be conducted. I wonder how you are dealing with that as a concept. What is the future of that in europe . The your is has developed the concept of multidemand operations and a fundamental aspect of that multidomain operations is activity short of conflict. The phases are compete, penetrate, disintegrate. Competition as a natural and ongoing state of affairs. It depends on which modality you are talking about. There are things that we do every day. Some can be as simple as where we move our forces, how publicly we do so. It can be as simple as combating misinformation that we see emerge in the public domain. Newato has an entire is very thing which active in helping to identify this information. In a democracy, particularly a democracy is trickier than when you have a topdown command and control. Are you tackling gray zone warfare in terms of competition but also the disinformation and misinformation aspect of it because they seem linked but at the same time separate. Across nato, everyone is focused on it. Gray zone, hybrid activity, competition short of conflict. You do have to deal with individual nations. They all see it a little bit differently. Not the same. Some people like the term competition short of conflict because when you translate that into their language, it means we are about to go to word. What im excited about is everyone focusing on this. At a conference not long ago a young officer stood up and said something that was very contemplative from a ground force, land perspective. His openended question was the load thresh below the threshold of orbit above the threshold to act. I really like that. Patrick did he get a promotion . The next question was what is the threshold . Some say we are at war now. Others say there is a threshold to war. Sometimes we simplify it too much in nato and say article five. Nationstates take it on differently. Talk aboute secgen it. Secretary stoltenberg. Patrick in terms of gray zone were fair, do you say there is still a lot of work to do to be where we need to be in terms of being a credible the current force on that sort of behavior . Never in my 3040 years in the army have i said i was ready. Toldi was a lieutenant, i an officer that i was ready. He said when you can do that operation at night with all of your equipment on, then you are ready. This is somewhat of a new field especially when you talk about land forces. There is room for growth. We aret is exciting as on the right trajectory of across the aligns. Patrick let me ask you about this because this is an issue that challenges the traditional line between military forces. You also have communicators and policy folks and gray zone advantages that go over those distinctions. Do you feel nato forces and Democratic Forces in the west are prepared for the next phase of it in europe . we have been spending a lot of time on this. There has been a good conversation going on within the alliance about how to tackle this at the National Level but also had weight plate to the but also, how do we play to the advantage of the alliance to do things to support our allies when they are attacked. You all probably know about the European Center of excellence for countering threats in helsinki. It has been doing a lot of work to develop a playbook of countermeasures and potential options. Our disposal in the face of hybrid attacks at different levels. It is important to build on that and start socializing those options so policymakers understand what options are actually on the table. Taken by are not surprise when the shoe drops and things happen. That they are not controversial but more socialized in the minds of our policymakers. They can only go so far. I do think we need to put more emphasis on how do we take this. The trouble is so much needs to be done at the National Level but it is difficult to coordinate that in a multinational session. You can do a lot surprisingly. An area that nato needs to prioritize. A second butfor with everything we have seen, you could call it at level one. And level three is something that would trigger article five or armed attack. Is a level two in there that we are just starting to think about. This withrting to do the germans and saudi arabia but the idea that you could shut down five or six grids massively across several countries that would be a significant attack to which you would want to have a significant response. And were thinking about what those responses could look like. Patrick what would they look like . Uren it does not have to be the same kind o