Looming discontinuities in U.S. military strategy and defens
Looming discontinuities in U.S. military strategy and defense planning
12 min read
Rate this book:
About This Book
The authors argue that the United States is entering a period of discontinuity in its defense planning, something that future historians may see as a planning crisis. The causes are technology diffusion that is leveling aspects of the playing field militarily, geostrategic changes, and the range of potential adversaries. The authors see these as leading to (1) increasingly difficult force projection in some important circumstances; (2) a related block obsolescence of U.S. forces and concepts of operations; (3) the need for a new grand strategy in the Asia-Pacific region, where China is now a major regional power; and (4) the United States having to deal with a demanding mix of "complex operations" (e.g., counterinsurgency and stabilization) and traditional challenges. Obstacles exist to taking on these challenges. These include severe economic issues and the absence of consensus on the nature of next-generation forces and posturing. The paper presents three illustrative models for future concepts of operations, but all are very challenging. They and others will need to be explored with considerable innovation and experimentation. Finally, the papers argue for a comprehensive rebalancing of national security strategy, not just a rebalancing of military capabilities.
Buy This Book
As an Amazon Associate and Bookshop.org affiliate, BookOrb earns from qualifying purchases.
Write a Review
Sign in to write a review.
More by Davis, Paul K.
A composite approach to Air Force planning
A new analytic technique for t
A new analytic technique for the study of deterrence, escalation control, and war termination
A new methodology for modeling
A new methodology for modeling national command level decisionmaking in war games and simulations
Aggregation, disaggregation, and the 3:1 rule in ground combat
An analyst's primer for the RA
An analyst's primer for the RAND/ABEL programming language
An introduction to variable-re
An introduction to variable-resolution modeling and cross-resolution model connection