Jonathan Garrity
NYC • CEO @ Tagup Inc.

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Measuring Military Output: Deterrence, Readiness, and What Actually Matters

January 15, 2026

Key Narrative

The defense policy conversation is dominated by input metrics—how much we spend, how many ships we have, personnel counts. But these tell us little about what matters: can our military deter adversaries and, if deterrence fails, win? This post argues for output-oriented metrics and explores what those might look like.

The central tension: deterrence is impossible to measure directly (you can’t observe wars that didn’t happen), yet it’s the primary purpose of peacetime military spending. Readiness—the ability to deploy and fight on short notice—is measurable but imperfect. Victory in conflict is the ultimate test but comes too late as a feedback mechanism.


Outline

I. Introduction: The Input Fallacy

II. The Primary Outputs of Military Power

  1. Deterrence: Preventing conflicts through credible threat
    • Nuclear deterrence (relatively clear)
    • Conventional deterrence (murky)
    • Extended deterrence to allies
  2. Warfighting capability: Winning if deterrence fails
  3. Coercive diplomacy: Shaping behavior short of war
  4. Reassurance: Calming allies, preventing proliferation

III. The Measurement Problem

IV. Candidate Output Metrics

  1. Readiness indicators
    • Time to deploy X capability to Y region
    • Mission-capable rates (with caveats)
    • Training quality assessments
  2. Wargame performance
    • Limitations and gaming concerns
    • Value as stress tests
  3. Adversary behavior
    • Changes in opponent posture, exercises, investments
    • Intelligence assessments of adversary perceptions
  4. Expert assessments
    • Net assessments, competitive analysis
    • Delphi-method forecasting

V. A Framework for Output-Oriented Thinking

VI. Implications for Policy

VII. Conclusion


Suggested Sources

Academic & Policy Research

Historical Case Studies

Data Sources

Contemporary Analysis

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