Elbridge Colby
Elbridge A. Colby is an American defense strategist and government official serving as Under Secretary of Defense for Policy since April 2025.[1] A graduate of Harvard College and Yale Law School, Colby previously held the position of Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Strategy and Force Development from 2017 to 2018, where he served as the principal architect of the 2018 National Defense Strategy, which reoriented U.S. military priorities toward great power competition, particularly with China.[2][3] Colby is the co-founder and principal of The Marathon Initiative, a think tank dedicated to developing U.S. strategies for sustained great power rivalry, emphasizing diplomatic, military, and economic preparations for long-term competition.[4] In this role and through his writings, he advocates a "strategy of denial" aimed at preventing Chinese hegemony in Asia through credible deterrence and force posture adjustments, rather than indefinite forward presence or offensive operations.[5] His seminal book, The Strategy of Denial: American Defense in an Age of Great Power Conflict (2021), provides a realist framework for U.S. defense policy, arguing that the primary objective should be to deter and, if necessary, defeat Chinese aggression in the Western Pacific while deprioritizing secondary theaters to avoid overextension.[5] Colby's views have influenced debates on resource allocation, including arguments for limiting U.S. commitments in Europe to focus on Indo-Pacific deterrence, earning him recognition for awards such as the Department of Defense's Exceptional Public Service Medal.[2] While praised by realists for causal focus on power balances and empirical threats, his prioritization of Asia over Ukraine aid has drawn criticism from interventionist circles, though he maintains it aligns with vital national interests based on geographic and military realities.[6][7]Background
Early Life and Family
Elbridge Andrew Colby was born on December 30, 1979.[8] He is the grandson of William E. Colby, who directed the Central Intelligence Agency from September 1973 to January 1976 during the Watergate era and Vietnam War aftermath.[9] [10] His great-grandfather, Elbridge Atherton Colby (1891–1982), served as a U.S. Army officer in World War I and authored works on military strategy and international law, including The World's Greatest Conflict (1940).[9] Colby's father, Jonathan E. Colby, is an investment banker who graduated from Princeton University and Yale University and has served as a senior adviser at the Carlyle Group.[10] [11] Colby spent several years of his childhood in Tokyo, Japan, accompanying his father, who headed the local office of First Boston, a U.S. investment bank.[12] [13] He returned to the United States around age 13 and grew up in Massachusetts.[14] The family's legacy in national security and public service, spanning military, intelligence, and finance, influenced Colby's early exposure to strategic thinking, though he has described his upbringing as rooted in Yankee stock amid urban New York influences before the Japan stint.[11]Education
Colby attended the American School in Japan, earning his high school diploma there.[8] He then pursued undergraduate studies at Harvard College, from which he graduated in 2002 with a Bachelor of Arts degree in history.[8][2] Following a period of professional experience, Colby enrolled at Yale Law School, completing a Juris Doctor degree between 2006 and 2009.[8]Pre-Government Career
Initial Professional Roles
Following his graduation from Harvard College, Elbridge Colby's initial professional roles centered on national security and intelligence matters within U.S. government advisory bodies. In 2003, he served with the Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA) in Iraq, a transitional administration established under the U.S. Department of Defense and State Department to govern post-invasion Iraq.[15] [16] This early deployment provided hands-on experience in post-conflict governance and reconstruction amid ongoing insurgency challenges.[17] From 2004 to 2005, Colby contributed as a staff member to the President's Commission on the Intelligence Capabilities of the United States Regarding Weapons of Mass Destruction, tasked with investigating intelligence failures leading to the Iraq War, particularly claims of Iraqi WMD programs.[2] [15] The commission, chaired by Judge Laurence Silberman and former Senator Chuck Robb, issued a report in March 2005 critiquing systemic analytic shortcomings at agencies like the CIA while exonerating policymakers from deliberate misrepresentation.[17] Building on this, Colby worked from 2005 to 2006 in the newly established Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI), supporting the integration of U.S. intelligence community elements during its formative phase under Director John Negroponte.[15] In 2008–2009, he advised the Congressional Commission on the Strategic Posture of the United States, which assessed nuclear deterrence policy, arms control, and nonproliferation strategies amid debates over the New START treaty.[17] [15] These roles, spanning advisory commissions and nascent intelligence structures, established Colby's early expertise in defense strategy and intelligence reform prior to his transition to analytical positions in non-governmental organizations.[2]Policy and Think Tank Involvement
From 2010 to 2013, Elbridge Colby served as principal analyst and division lead for global strategic affairs at the Center for Naval Analyses (CNA), a federally funded research and development center focused on defense and national security analysis. In this capacity, he conducted assessments of international security dynamics, including strategic threats and force planning.[15][2] Subsequently, from 2014 to 2017, Colby was the Robert M. Gates Senior Fellow at the Center for a New American Security (CNAS), a nonpartisan think tank emphasizing innovative defense policies. His work centered on defense strategy, deterrence, nuclear weapons and posture, conventional force structure, U.S. alliances, and intelligence integration.[18][15][2] At CNAS, Colby co-authored the 2015 report A Nuclear Strategy and Posture for 2030, which recommended modernizing U.S. nuclear capabilities to address peer competitors like Russia and China, including enhanced warhead flexibility and triad sustainability amid fiscal constraints. The report argued for a posture shift from post-Cold War reductions toward credible deterrence against advanced nuclear-armed adversaries.[19][20] Colby also contributed to broader policy discourse through external writings, such as his 2015 article "America Must Prepare for Limited War" in The National Interest, which urged U.S. forces to prioritize warfighting readiness for regional conflicts over counterinsurgency.[21] In parallel with his CNAS fellowship, Colby participated in the 2014 National Defense Panel, a congressionally mandated bipartisan body that critiqued U.S. defense planning and advocated for increased investment in advanced technologies and Indo-Pacific deterrence to counter revisionist powers.[15]First Trump Administration
Appointment and Responsibilities
In May 2017, Elbridge Colby was appointed by the Trump administration as Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Strategy and Force Development within the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Policy.[22][2] This mid-level position reported to higher policy officials, including Under Secretary David Trachtenberg, and operated under Secretary of Defense James Mattis.[23] Colby's appointment aligned with the administration's early emphasis on revising U.S. defense posture amid rising great-power challenges, drawing on his prior expertise in strategic planning from think tanks like the Center for a New American Security. In this role, Colby oversaw key aspects of defense strategy formulation, including the integration of force structure assessments with long-term planning and resource allocation.[2] His responsibilities encompassed directing the development of foundational documents such as the National Defense Strategy (NDS), which he helped author to prioritize competition with revisionist powers like China and Russia over counterterrorism operations.[6][24] Additionally, he managed nuclear policy coordination, force development initiatives, and interagency alignment on strategic guidance, ensuring that military capabilities matched emerging threats identified in intelligence assessments.[2][15] Colby served in this capacity until 2018, departing amid internal debates over strategy implementation but leaving a framework that influenced subsequent DoD budgeting and procurement priorities.[22][25]Key Contributions to Strategy
Colby served as Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Strategy and Force Development from November 2017 to April 2018, overseeing the development of long-term defense planning, including force structure assessments and strategic guidance.[22] In this capacity, he directed the principal team responsible for drafting the unclassified summary of the 2018 National Defense Strategy (NDS), released on January 19, 2018, which explicitly prioritized "strategic competition" with revisionist powers China and Russia over counterterrorism operations.[26][27] The NDS, the first such document in a decade to de-emphasize irregular warfare, called for investments in advanced technologies, nuclear modernization, and integrated deterrence to counter peer adversaries' anti-access/area-denial capabilities, thereby aligning resource allocation with threats to U.S. primacy in the Indo-Pacific.[28] This strategic reorientation influenced subsequent Department of Defense budgeting and programming, including the FY2019 budget request's emphasis on lethality enhancements like hypersonic weapons, long-range fires, and resilient basing—measures aimed at denying Chinese territorial expansion rather than sustaining indefinite Middle East engagements.[6] Colby's efforts also extended to interagency coordination, integrating the NDS with the December 2017 National Security Strategy by advocating for a "competition continuum" that treated China's economic and military coercion as existential challenges requiring prioritized military readiness over alliance burdensharing in secondary theaters.[29] His work earned him the Department of Defense's Exceptional Public Service Medal and Distinguished Public Service Medal, recognizing the strategy's role in refocusing U.S. posture amid rising great-power tensions.[22]Interlude Period
Advocacy and Private Activities
Following his service in the first Trump administration, Colby co-founded The Marathon Initiative in 2019 with A. Wess Mitchell, serving as its principal to advance strategies for U.S. great power competition.[4] The organization focuses on developing diplomatic, military, and economic approaches to sustain long-term rivalry, particularly with China, emphasizing the preservation of American prosperity, security, and democratic way of life through prioritized resource allocation.[4] Its work includes research, policy analysis, and public education to promote "strategic deprioritization," arguing for redirecting U.S. efforts from secondary theaters like Europe to the Indo-Pacific to avoid overextension and multi-front conflicts.[30] In this capacity, Colby contributed to key publications advocating restraint and focus. His 2021 book, The Strategy of Denial: American Defense in an Age of Great Power Conflict, published by Yale University Press, outlines a realist framework for denying Chinese hegemony in Asia while limiting commitments elsewhere, drawing on historical precedents like Britain's naval prioritization against Germany in the early 20th century.[5] Co-authored reports under The Marathon Initiative include "Getting Strategic Deprioritization Right" (2023), which he helped produce with Mitchell, Jakub Grygiel, and Matt Pottinger, detailing mechanisms to reduce European dependencies without abandoning allies, and "Broadening the Base" (2024), examining defense industrial reforms to support Indo-Pacific deterrence.[31][32] Colby's private advocacy extended to public discourse, including op-eds and speeches critiquing unlimited aid to Ukraine as a drain on resources needed for Taiwan and broader deterrence against China. In a July 2024 American Compass article, he argued that U.S. foreign policy should singularly prioritize preventing Chinese dominance, viewing European conflicts as peripheral to vital American interests.[33] He participated in forums like the National Conservatism Conference and Aspen Ideas Festival, reinforcing calls for military buildup in Asia and nuclear modernization over expansive global policing.[34] These efforts positioned him as a leading voice among conservative realists skeptical of post-Cold War interventionism.[35]Major Publications
Colby's most prominent publication during this period is his 2021 book, The Strategy of Denial: American Defense in an Age of Great Power Conflict, published by Yale University Press.[5] In it, he advocates for a U.S. grand strategy of denial, aimed at preventing revisionist powers like China from achieving regional hegemony in key theaters such as the Indo-Pacific, while arguing against overextension in secondary regions like Europe and the Middle East to preserve resources for the primary threat.[36] The work draws on classical realist principles and historical precedents, critiquing post-Cold War U.S. primacy as unsustainable amid great power competition, and was selected by The Wall Street Journal as one of the best books on politics of 2021.[37] Beyond the book, Colby contributed policy-oriented articles to journals including Foreign Affairs and War on the Rocks, where he expanded on themes of strategic prioritization, deterrence against China, and selective disengagement from peripheral conflicts.[38][39] For instance, in Foreign Affairs, he has argued for preparing the U.S. military for potential high-end conflict with China, emphasizing alliances like those with Japan and Australia over indefinite support for Ukraine.[38] These pieces, often co-authored with experts from the Marathon Initiative, reinforced his critique of interventionist policies and called for congressional and executive action to realign defense spending toward Indo-Pacific capabilities.[39]Second Trump Administration
Nomination and Confirmation Process
On December 22, 2024, President-elect Donald Trump announced the nomination of Elbridge Colby to serve as Under Secretary of Defense for Policy, the third-ranking civilian position in the Department of Defense responsible for strategic planning and international security policy.[40][41] The nomination drew immediate attention due to Colby's prior role in the first Trump administration as deputy assistant secretary of defense for strategy and force development, where he contributed to the 2018 National Defense Strategy emphasizing great-power competition, particularly with China.[42] The Senate Armed Services Committee held a confirmation hearing on March 4, 2025, during which Colby faced questions on resource prioritization, alliances, and threats including China, Iran, and Russia.[43][44] He affirmed that a nuclear-armed Iran would pose an existential threat to Israel and U.S. interests, while advocating restraint in European commitments to focus on the Indo-Pacific.[45] The process encountered resistance from some Republican senators, including concerns raised by Sen. Tom Cotton over Colby's views on Ukraine aid and alliance burdensharing, though no formal holds derailed advancement.[46][47] On April 1, 2025, the committee voted to advance the nomination, followed by full Senate confirmation on April 8, 2025, by a vote of 78-20, with bipartisan support despite criticisms labeling Colby a "lightning rod" for his realist prioritization of China over other theaters.[48][1][49] The relatively swift timeline reflected Trump's push for rapid staffing amid geopolitical tensions, though debates highlighted tensions between interventionist and restraint-oriented factions within the GOP.[50][51]Tenure and Policy Actions
Colby was confirmed by the United States Senate on April 8, 2025, in a 54-46 vote, to serve as Under Secretary of Defense for Policy, the Pentagon's senior civilian official responsible for developing and integrating military strategy, planning, and policy.[49][45] In this position, reporting to Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, Colby directed the Department of Defense's (DoD) strategic reviews and resource allocation, prioritizing long-term competition with China over peripheral commitments.[43] His tenure began shortly after confirmation, amid efforts to realign U.S. defense posture toward the Indo-Pacific theater.[52] A cornerstone of Colby's policy actions was leading the formulation of an updated National Defense Strategy, released in draft form by September 2025, which stressed burden-sharing with allies and enhanced deterrence against Chinese aggression in the Taiwan Strait and South China Sea.[53] The strategy advocated reallocating DoD resources from European theaters to bolster naval and air capabilities in Asia, including expanded joint exercises with Japan, South Korea, and Australia, while requiring NATO partners to increase defense spending to 3% of GDP to offset U.S. contributions.[53][24] This approach drew from Colby's prior work on the 2018 National Defense Strategy during the first Trump administration, but intensified fiscal restraint, proposing a 10-15% reduction in non-China-focused programs to fund hypersonic weapons and submarine production.[26] Colby also initiated reviews of overseas commitments, resulting in the DoD's suspension of certain arms shipments to Ukraine in June 2025 to preserve munitions stockpiles for potential Indo-Pacific contingencies, a decision that reportedly surprised elements of the White House and prompted internal debates.[54] This move aligned with his advocacy for strategic prioritization, arguing that indefinite support for Ukraine risked depleting U.S. readiness against peer competitors like China.[7] Concurrently, he accelerated alliances in Asia, including bilateral defense pacts with India and trilateral frameworks with Japan and South Korea, emphasizing integrated deterrence without expanding U.S. ground forces in Europe.[24] These actions elicited friction with allies and interventionist factions, as Colby's directives—such as conditioning European basing rights on higher host-nation contributions—were seen by some as abrupt shifts undermining transatlantic unity.[55] Nonetheless, supporters credited his tenure with refocusing DoD budgeting on verifiable threats, with FY2026 proposals allocating an additional $20 billion to Pacific Command assets.[56] By October 2025, Colby's influence had solidified a realist framework within the Pentagon, though ongoing interagency tensions highlighted challenges in implementation.[57]Foreign Policy Views
Realism and Strategic Prioritization
Colby's foreign policy framework is rooted in classical realism, which posits that states must prioritize their core security interests amid inevitable power competitions, rather than pursuing universal ideals or indefinite global commitments. He contends that the post-Cold War era of U.S. primacy has ended, necessitating a return to discriminating resource allocation based on threat assessments and geographic imperatives. In this view, finite military and economic capacities demand hard choices, rejecting the notion of simultaneous engagements across multiple theaters as unsustainable and diluting deterrence against primary adversaries.[58][36] Central to Colby's prioritization is the identification of China as the pacing challenge to U.S. security, given its economic scale, military modernization, and ambitions for Indo-Pacific dominance, which could control vital trade routes and resources comprising over half of global GDP. He argues for a "strategy of denial," outlined in his 2021 book The Strategy of Denial: American Defense in an Age of Great Power Conflict, which seeks to prevent Chinese hegemony in Asia through targeted deterrence—bolstering U.S. and allied capabilities in the Western Pacific—while avoiding offensive primacy or retrenchment. This approach emphasizes balance-of-power dynamics, where the U.S. maintains sufficient strength to credibly threaten denial of China's objectives, such as control over Taiwan, without overextending into non-existential conflicts.[36][59] Strategic prioritization, per Colby, requires subordinating secondary priorities like extensive Middle Eastern involvements or open-ended European subsidies to the Indo-Pacific focus, as resource diffusion risks failing everywhere. He has advocated reducing U.S. force posture in Europe to compel greater allied burden-sharing against Russia, freeing assets for Asia where the stakes for American prosperity and liberty are higher due to economic interdependence and China's revisionist trajectory. This realism critiques interventionist paradigms for eroding U.S. strength through mission creep, as seen in prolonged post-9/11 operations, and instead favors pragmatic alliances with partners like Japan, Australia, and India to distribute costs without assuming indefinite leadership.[60][12]Focus on China and Indo-Pacific
Elbridge Colby has consistently advocated for the United States to prioritize the Indo-Pacific region in its defense strategy, viewing China as the primary peer competitor and existential threat to American interests. As the principal architect of the 2018 National Defense Strategy, Colby led efforts to reorient U.S. military focus from counterterrorism to great-power competition, explicitly naming long-term strategic competition with China as the central challenge.[61][37] This shift emphasized building capabilities to deter Chinese aggression, particularly in scenarios involving Taiwan and the Western Pacific.[62] Central to Colby's framework is a "strategy of denial," aimed at preventing China from achieving regional hegemony in Asia, which he argues would undermine U.S. security, freedom, and prosperity. In his 2021 book The Strategy of Denial: Preserving Security in the Face of Great Power Competition, Colby outlines the need for the U.S. to concentrate military resources in the Indo-Pacific to deny Beijing dominance, rather than pursuing global primacy or retrenchment.[62][61] He proposes redistributing forces from secondary theaters, such as Europe, to bolster deterrence in Asia, including enhanced naval presence and alliances like the Quad and AUKUS.[12][37] Colby identifies Taiwan as a critical flashpoint, asserting that U.S. defense policy must prioritize repelling a potential Chinese invasion to maintain a favorable balance of power. He calls for increased nuclear deterrence and conventional forces tailored to the Indo-Pacific's maritime domain, where naval services play a pivotal role in denial operations.[37][62] This prioritization extends to strengthening partnerships with allies such as Japan, Australia, and India to counter Chinese expansionism, while urging Europe to assume greater responsibility for its own security to free U.S. assets for Asia.[12][61] In recent analyses, Colby has reiterated that failing to signal resolve against Chinese ambitions—through sustained military buildup and strategic clarity—risks emboldening Beijing toward aggression. He critiques overextension in unrelated conflicts as diluting focus on China, advocating instead for a disciplined approach that aligns resources with the scale of the Indo-Pacific challenge.[63][64] This realist orientation underscores his belief that American primacy depends on prevailing in the competition with China, not dissipating efforts globally.[62]Positions on Europe and Russia-Ukraine
Colby has advocated for a strategic reorientation of U.S. foreign policy that prioritizes competition with China in the Indo-Pacific over extensive commitments in Europe, arguing that the latter region's wealthier economies should assume greater responsibility for deterring Russia.[65] He contends that Europe's combined GDP surpasses that of Asia excluding China, yet European NATO allies have historically underinvested in defense, relying disproportionately on U.S. forces and funding, which undermines American deterrence against peer competitors like China.[33] This view informed his role in the 2018 National Defense Strategy, which emphasized great-power competition while calling for allies to meet the 2% GDP defense spending target established at the 2014 NATO Wales Summit.[66] Regarding the Russia-Ukraine war, Colby has described Russia's 2022 invasion as an "evil act" and expressed moral support for Ukraine's defense, but he maintains that the U.S. cannot sustain unlimited aid without jeopardizing readiness for a potential conflict with China, given munitions depletion and opportunity costs documented in Pentagon assessments.[67] In March 2025 Senate confirmation hearings for Under Secretary of Defense for Policy, he deflected direct assessments of Russian war crimes, emphasizing instead the need to avoid overextension that could invite Chinese aggression in Taiwan, and advocated for a negotiated settlement to freeze the conflict rather than indefinite escalation.[68][69] He has criticized unrestricted Ukrainian use of U.S. weapons for deep strikes into Russia, arguing it risks broader escalation without commensurate strategic gains against the primary threat of China, whose alliance with Russia amplifies but does not equate the European theater's priority.[70] Colby's position aligns with a realist framework that views Russia as a regional power with limited global reach—its military modernization notwithstanding—incapable of challenging U.S. primacy on the scale of China, thus warranting European-led conventional deterrence supplemented by extended U.S. nuclear guarantees rather than forward-deployed American troops.[71][12] He has urged allies like Germany to lead burden-sharing efforts, proposing in 2025 analyses that the U.S. shift conventional responsibilities while retaining nuclear oversight to maintain alliance cohesion without diluting Indo-Pacific focus. This approach, he argues, would compel Europe to address its own vulnerabilities exposed by Russia's actions, fostering self-reliance amid U.S. resource constraints evidenced by post-2022 aid flows exceeding $100 billion in U.S. contributions alone.[72] Critics from interventionist perspectives contend this risks emboldening Russia, but Colby counters that unchecked European free-riding has already eroded U.S. strategic posture, citing NATO's pre-2022 average defense spending below 2% as empirical evidence of imbalance.[73][74]Stance on Middle East
Colby views the Middle East as a theater of secondary priority for U.S. national security, advocating a substantial reduction in American military presence to redirect resources toward countering China in the Indo-Pacific. He has proposed a complete withdrawal of U.S. forces from the Persian Gulf and a diminished role in countering Iranian proxies, arguing that prolonged engagements divert assets from existential great-power threats.[75][76] This perspective aligns with his broader realist framework, which emphasizes finite U.S. capabilities and the need for strategic restraint in non-peer regions, as opposed to the post-9/11 pattern of expansive interventions.[7] In line with offshore balancing principles, Colby supports maintaining minimal U.S. capabilities sufficient to prevent regional hegemony—such as by any single power dominating oil flows or threatening allies—without committing to ground wars or nation-building. He has opposed the 2003 Iraq War and subsequent U.S. conflicts in the region, critiquing them as resource-intensive distractions that weakened America's position against rising peers like China.[77][7] Despite calls for retrenchment, Colby has affirmed opposition to a nuclear-armed Iran, stating during his March 4, 2025, Senate confirmation hearing for Under Secretary of Defense for Policy: "I don't want a nuclear Iran," while endorsing diplomatic efforts to block Tehran's nuclear ambitions.[43][78] Regarding Israel, Colby contends that enhancing its qualitative military edge—through advanced arms sales and technology transfers—enables the ally to shoulder greater burdens against shared threats like Iran, thereby allowing the U.S. to reduce its direct footprint without abandoning vital interests.[79] This approach has elicited concerns from interventionist and pro-Israel advocates, who interpret it as underprioritizing Iran's nuclear program and proxy networks, potentially emboldening adversaries amid ongoing regional instability.[80] Such critiques often emanate from groups with hawkish leanings, which may amplify perceived risks to underscore the case for sustained U.S. activism.[76]Controversies
Criticisms from Interventionists and Allies
Interventionists, including neoconservatives and advocates of expansive U.S. global engagements, have accused Elbridge Colby of promoting an overly narrow focus on China that weakens commitments to other theaters, particularly Europe and the Middle East. They argue that his strategic prioritization risks emboldening adversaries like Russia by signaling U.S. restraint elsewhere, with some labeling his approach as "isolationist" despite his advocacy for robust deterrence against Beijing.[81][82] For example, neoconservative critics have portrayed Colby's realism as a threat to the post-Cold War consensus on American primacy, viewing his emphasis on resource allocation toward Asia as dovish on fronts like Ukraine.[83][64] A focal point of contention arose in July 2025, when the Pentagon, under Colby's policy leadership, suspended deliveries of certain munitions to Ukraine—including Patriot air defense systems—to preserve U.S. stockpiles amid concerns over readiness for potential conflicts in the Indo-Pacific. This decision surprised elements within the Trump administration and drew sharp rebukes from interventionist lawmakers and officials who prioritized ongoing aid to Kyiv, attributing the move directly to Colby's influence and warning it could prolong the war or cede strategic ground to Moscow.[84][85] Critics, often from think tanks and media outlets aligned with globalist foreign policy, contended that such restraint aids China's ally Russia and undermines U.S. credibility, though these sources frequently reflect institutional biases favoring indefinite interventions over finite resource realism.[54] U.S. allies, particularly in Europe, have voiced frustration with Colby's policies as eroding transatlantic solidarity and NATO's collective defense posture. European leaders and analysts criticized his advocacy for minimal U.S. security guarantees to Ukraine post-conflict, announced in August 2025, as insufficient to deter future Russian aggression and overly deferential to burden-sharing demands that pressure Europe to militarize independently.[86] His repeated calls to reduce U.S. troop presence in Europe—potentially cutting levels to pre-2014 baselines—and redirect assets to Asia have been seen by allies as abandoning shared responsibilities, with reports of blindsided reactions to rapid Pentagon shifts under his tenure.[55][24] These complaints, amplified in outlets skeptical of restraint, highlight tensions between Colby's causal prioritization of peer competitors and allies' expectations of U.S.-led stabilization, though empirical data on European defense spending increases under such pressure suggest partial validation of his incentives for greater allied self-reliance.[87]Debates on Resource Allocation
Colby has consistently argued that U.S. military resources are finite and must be prioritized toward deterring China in the Indo-Pacific, the primary threat to American interests, rather than sustaining open-ended commitments elsewhere. In his 2023 book The Strategy of Denial, he outlines a "denial strategy" emphasizing naval and air investments in the Western Pacific to prevent Chinese dominance, warning that diffusion of forces across theaters like Europe and the Middle East undermines this focus.[62] This view stems from his role in shaping the 2018 National Defense Strategy, which elevated great-power competition with China as the Pentagon's top priority while calling for burden-sharing with European allies.[59] A central debate centers on U.S. aid to Ukraine amid Russia's 2022 invasion, where Colby contends that excessive munitions and funding—exceeding $60 billion by mid-2025—deplete stockpiles needed for a potential Taiwan contingency, creating a "resource drain" that invites Chinese aggression. He has publicly stated that Europe, with its larger combined GDP and military potential, should assume primary responsibility for its defense, allowing the U.S. to redirect assets like long-range precision weapons to Asia.[88] [73] In 2025, as Under Secretary of Defense for Policy in the second Trump administration, Colby's memo highlighting U.S. weapons shortages reportedly influenced a temporary pause in certain Ukraine arms shipments, prioritizing Indo-Pacific readiness.[89] [90] Critics, including interventionist analysts and European allies, accuse Colby of isolationism that signals weakness, potentially emboldening adversaries by abandoning Ukraine and eroding NATO cohesion; they argue that supporting Kyiv deters China by demonstrating resolve against revisionist powers, and that resources can be scaled through production surges rather than strict zero-sum trade-offs.[91] [12] Colby rebuts this by invoking historical precedents like the U.S. failure to prioritize Japan before Pearl Harbor, asserting that causal realism demands focusing on the peer competitor capable of existential threats to the homeland, not peripheral conflicts.[92] [54] Similar tensions arise over the Middle East, where Colby advocates deprioritizing counterterrorism and Israel-related operations to avoid diverting forces from China; he has supported conditional alliances there but insists they not compete with core Pacific investments, as evidenced by his push for regional partners to handle burdens akin to Europe's.[12] Proponents of broader engagement counter that ignoring Iran or Hamas risks proliferation of threats that could entangle U.S. forces, but Colby maintains that such risks are secondary to Beijing's systemic challenge, substantiated by China's military buildup surpassing U.S. naval capacity in the region.[93][62]Writings and Influence
Books and Key Articles
Colby authored The Strategy of Denial: American Defense in an Age of Great Power Conflict, published by Yale University Press in 2021. The book articulates a realist U.S. grand strategy emphasizing denial of Chinese hegemony in the Indo-Pacific, particularly through defending Taiwan against invasion, while advocating reduced commitments elsewhere to concentrate resources on peer competitors.[5] It was selected by The Wall Street Journal as one of the ten best books of 2021 on politics.[37] In 2013, Colby co-edited Strategic Stability: Contending Interpretations with Michael S. Gerson, published by the U.S. Army War College's Strategic Studies Institute. The volume examines competing definitions and implications of strategic stability in nuclear deterrence, drawing contributions from experts on U.S.-Russia and U.S.-China dynamics.[94] Colby has published key articles in prominent journals advancing similar themes of prioritization and deterrence. Notable examples include:- "If You Want Peace, Prepare for Nuclear War" (Foreign Affairs, October 2018), which calls for bolstering U.S. nuclear capabilities to deter aggression from China and Russia amid eroding arms control frameworks.[95]
- "The Age of Great-Power Competition" (Foreign Affairs), outlining the shift from counterterrorism to confronting revisionist states like China as the central U.S. security challenge.[38]
- "How the United States Could Lose a Great-Power War" (Foreign Policy), analyzing vulnerabilities in U.S. force posture against a Chinese assault on Taiwan and recommending conventional buildup.[96]