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Operations Targeting and Effects Synchronization Process in Northern Iraq
"In the early 4th century BCE [Before the Common Era] […] Gallic tribes sacked Rome. Faced with the first real threat to its existence, the young Roman state recognized the need to rethink how it organized for combat. Of the various changes adopted, the most important and extreme transformation was the abandonment of the Greek-style phalanx. This military organizational structure had been long-established as the most effective way to achieve success against opponents with a similar operational paradigm. […] Faced with a newly complex operating environment, the Romans took the transformative step of adopting the more flexible infantry formations of their most tenacious enemies, the Samnites. Today, America is experiencing an analogous military epiphany as its military adapts to complex, adaptive, and asymmetric operating environments that defy accepted military conventions. In January 2008, in the wake of its final after action review from its 2006-2007 deployment to northern Iraq, the U.S. Army 25th Infantry Division Headquarters found itself revising longstanding organizational thinking to adapt its structure to the new demands it would face in northern Iraq later that year. The division's new operational milieu presented an increasingly complex operating environment, an adaptive asymmetric threat, and a traditional staff organization ill-suited to deal adequately and effectively with either. The division recognized a vital requirement to rethink how to organize its staff to best meet the commander's vision and intent (as embodied in our campaign plan). We felt this reorganization should fulfill three critical roles: inform and enhance the commander's decision making cycle, create a logical nesting of our staff processes with the Joint architecture used by our higher headquarters, and make our subordinate units more effective in their counterinsurgency roles across northern Iraq."
U.S. Army Combined Arms Center
Boylan, Gregory L.; Guthrie, Thomas P.; Caslen, Robert L.
2010
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U.S. Army Approach to Security Force Assistance
"As the U.S. military looks ahead to the first half of the 21st century, several global trends--globalization, technology availability, population growth, urbanization, increased resource demands, climate change, and proliferation of weapons of mass destruction--are shaping the international security environment. They place increasing stresses on governments to satisfy their citizens' legitimate expectations, including meeting their basic needs, receiving fair and impartial justice, and attaining increased prosperity and opportunities for themselves and their progeny. Governments unable to satisfy these aspirations risk losing their ability to govern. This loss creates opportunities for extremist groups to export terror and violence on behalf of radical ideologies. Ultimately, it becomes a setting for persistent conflict."
U.S. Army Combined Arms Center
Torrey, Bill; Redmond, Mike; Donnelly, Edward P.
2010-11
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Steering America's Warship Toward Moral Communication (and Real Success) in the 21st Century
"When they analyze the 'Arab Spring' or 'Arab Awakening,' future historians will probably stress the crucial role information technology played in fanning its flames. Thanks to news outlets like Al Jazeera and social media such as Facebook, YouTube, and SMS [Short Message Service] networks, the gap between the dictatorships' propaganda and reality has been relentlessly exposed. Although they tried, Arab autocrats have been unable to plausibly deny the scale of the demonstrations against them. Even more damaging to their regimes, they have been unable to suppress videos of the passionate protests. And when they ordered brutal security crackdowns, they have been unable to hide the graphic images and sounds of oppression, the crack of gunfire, the visible fear of civilians, the cries of the wounded, and the disturbing sight of bloody corpses. It may be counterintuitive, but more often than not, the databyte is proving mightier than the tank. How can this be? The answer is simple: armed conflict is more a matter of mind (perceptions and judgment) than weapons."
U.S. Army Combined Arms Center
Pryer, Douglas A.
2012
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Field Manual 5-0: Exercising Command and Control in an Era of Persistent Conflict
"Our Army, as part of a joint interdependent force, continues to engage in full spectrum operations around the world. Several global trends--such as failing and failed states, resource demands, and proliferations of weapons of mass destruction--make it likely that the next decades will be characterized by persistent conflict. Protracted confrontations among state, nonstate, and individual actors that are increasingly willing to use violence to achieve their political and ideological ends appear certain. Whether reacting to natural disasters or confronting armed enemies, Army forces will continue to conduct operations in complex, ever-changing, and uncertain operational environments. Operational experience and lessons, transformational changes, and recent revisions to Joint and Army doctrine now demand major revisions to Field Manual (FM) 5-0, The Operations Process. Of the many lessons learned from wartime experience since 2001, the need to improve our ability to exercise the 'thinking' aspects of command and control stands out.2 The 2010 edition of FM 5-0 represents a significant evolution in Army doctrine focusing on the cognitive aspects of command and control."
U.S. Army Combined Arms Center
Ancker, Clinton J., III; Flynn, Michael J.
2010
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State Defense Forces: The Missing Link in National Security
"The citizen militia system of the United States has been plagued historically by a confused and often contradictory basic philosophy. On the one hand, the militias were, and are, seen as crucial military resources available to the individual states to be used as local constabularies to assist the civil authorities in situations calling for skills, organization and capabilities beyond the level of local police, fire and disaster relief agencies. On the other hand, the citizen militias have been seen, increasingly in the 20th century, as an essential reserve of trained personnel available for mobilization to active service with the regular Armed Forces of the nation."
U.S. Army Combined Arms Center
Stein, George J.
1984-09
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Iran and Venezuela: The Axis of Annoyance
"In September 2007, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad made a highly contentious visit to New York. In addition to addressing the General Assembly of the United Nations, Ahmadinejad's agenda included Columbia University, where his invitation to give a speech caused a public uproar days just prior to his arrival. Bowing to public pressure, the university's president, Lee Bollinger, made sure that Ahmadinejad's reception at Columbia was a chilly one. […]. On his way home, Ahmadinejad made a stopover in Latin America. His first destination was Caracas, where his friend Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez greeted him like a long-lost brother. Chavez told Ahmadinejad that he had handled the personal criticism heaped upon him at Columbia University 'with the greatness of a revolutionary.' Such is the nature of the relationship between Venezuela and Iran. The two countries' self-styled 'axis of unity' is more bombastic than substantive. However, the substance is enough to cause concern. Chavez and Ahmadinejad have clearly formed an alliance of convenience based on formulaic anti-Americanism. Their nations are so incompatible that most of their partnering efforts have resulted in unfulfilled promises and empty rhetoric. Unfortunately, their fiery verbal assaults against the 'imperialism' of the United States cannot be dismissed so easily. Booming oil prices have left the two leaders quite capable of backing up their hostile words with actions. That is why Cynthia Arnson, of the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, has wondered whether the relationship poses a threat to the United States or is merely an 'Axis of Annoyance.'"
U.S. Army Combined Arms Center
Hakimzadeh, Kavon
2009-05
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Counterinsurgency Lessons from Iraq
"The military war in Iraq ended in 2008, although political conflict among Sunnis, Shi'ites, and Kurds will continue for decades. At the same time, the war in Afghanistan has heated up, with more American troops committed to battle. This article, based on 15 extended trips [Bing West] made to Iraq and interviews [he] conducted with 2,000 Soldiers and Marines, reviews the causes of the turnaround in Iraq and their importance for doctrine development and for success in the war in Afghanistan. From 2003 through 2008, two separate fronts accounted for about two-thirds of all American fatalities. In the west, the Sunni province of Anbar emerged as the heartland of a sectarian resistance that was gradually taken over by Al-Qaeda in Iraq (AQI). Anbar accounted for 42 percent of all U.S. fatalities in Iraq from 2004 through 2006. To the east, the Baghdad region accounted for 27 percent of the fatalities in 2004-2006. [...].. So by mid-2006, the coalition was losing on both fronts. In Anbar, according to an on-scene assessment, Al-Qaeda controlled the population. In Baghdad, a civil war was raging and the Sunnis were being driven from their homes. Yet, a year later the tide of war was flowing in the coalition's favor. What happened? Two events changed the course of the war: the 2006 Sunni Awakening in Anbar and the 2007 surge in Baghdad. The Awakening was the critical enabler for success of the surge."
U.S. Army Combined Arms Center
West, Francis J.
2009-03
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Narrowing the Gap: DOD and Stability Operations
"The Department of Defense (DOD) should challenge the assumption that it must prepare to perform all stability lines of operations as a 'core mission' as specified in Directive 3000.05 and subsequent Army operations doctrine FM3-0 because it does not have sufficient resources to accomplish all the assigned tasks on its own. Instead, DOD should focus on its strengths--providing civil security and control--and work to create conditions for civilian counterparts to operate more effectively on the ground to fill the gap. This requires general purpose forces (GPFs) to focus on security-related tasks, while a 'specialized training brigade' is created to institutionalize DOD capabilities to train foreign military, police, and border guards. Without investing significantly more in the capacity for supporting governance and economic and infrastructure development, DOD can mitigate risk by adopting more innovative ways to employ civil affairs (CA), other non-GPFs, and by leveraging Africa Command (AFRICOM) to build whole-of-government approaches. In fact, AFRICOM can be the laboratory, testing the whole-of-government approach in stability operations. Finally, DOD can partner with the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), its private sector partners, and others in industry to fill the gap. This requires DOD to determine new ways to manage contractors in high-paced operational environments."
U.S. Army Combined Arms Center
Shin, David W.
2009-03
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Military Review: The Professional Journal of the U.S. Army [Website]
"The Military Review provides an established and well regarded Army forum to stimulate original thought and debate on topics related to the art and science of land warfare. As such, it promotes communities of interest on a wide variety of issues of vital importance to the Army by providing a venue for publishing topical articles with new insights and fresh perspectives informed by original research, critical thinking, original thought, and persuasive analysis. The Hispano-American and Brazilian editions of the review provide key insights to military professionals in partner nations in Central and South America and often feature article contributions from prominent authors from Portuguese and Spanish speaking countries."
U.S. Army Combined Arms Center
2018
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Military Review: The Professional Journal of the U.S. Army [September-October 2017]
This September-October 2017 issue of "Military Review: The Professional Journal of the U.S. Army" features the following articles: "Preparing for the Fight Tonight: Multi-Domain Battle and Field Manual 3-0" by Gen. David G. Perkins; "The Indo-Asia Pacific and the Multi-Domain Battle Concept" by Gen. Robert B. Brown; "Theater Land Operations: Relevant Observations and Lessons from the Combined Joint Land Force Experience in Iraq" by Lt. Gen. Gary Volesky and Maj. Gen. Roger Noble; "In Defense of the Theater Army" by Lt. Col. Nicholas R. Simontis; "Expanding Tolstoy and Shrinking Dostoyevsky: How Russian Actions in the Information Space are Inverting Doctrinal Paradigms of Warfare" by Maj. Scott J. Harr; "Weaponizing Ridicule" by J. Michael Waller; "Fabian Strategy for a Twenty-First Century Hannibal: Reinvigorating U.S. Strategy in Iraq and Syria" by Maj. Kyle D. Packard; "The Mission Command of Islamic State: Deconstructing the Myth of Lone Wolves in the Deep Fight" by 1st Lt. Michael P. Ferguson; "III Corps during the Surge: A Study in Operational Art" by Maj. Wilson C. Blythe Jr.; "Solving Deployment Challenges Using a Systems Approach to Understand the Defense Transportation System" by Col. Dennis C. Major and Maj. Calvin E. Townsend Jr.; "Brazilian Organization for Combating Terrorism during the Rio 2016 Olympic Games and Paralympic Games" by Col. Alessandro Visacro; "Praise the Host and Pass the Fish Sauce: Medical Advisers in the Vietnam War" by Maj. Scott C. Woodard; "The Ghost Warriors: Inside Israel's Undercover War against Suicide Terrorism" by Lt. Col. John H. Modinger; and "The Birth of the U.S. Army" by Army University Press staff.
U.S. Army Combined Arms Center
2017-09
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Military Review: The Professional Journal of the U.S. Army [January-February 2018]
This January-February 2018 edition of "Military Review: The Professional Journal of the U.S. Army" features the following articles: "Geoeconomics" by Col. John F. Troxel; "Human Terrain System is Dead, Long Live...What?: Building and Sustaining Military Cultural Competence in the Aftermath of the Human Terrain System" by Maj. Ben Connable; "The Neglected Role of Brideprice in Catalyzing Instability and Violent Conflict" by Valerie M. Hudson and Hilary Matfess; "The Pagonis Effect" by Brig. Gen. Michael R. Fenzel and Capt. Benjamin H. Torgersen; "Prospective Strategy for Baltic Defense: The Russian Public and War Termination in the Baltic States" by Lukas Milevski; "Fixing Army Doctrine: A Network Approach" by Capt. James Tollefson; "An Alliance Divided?: Five Factors That Could Fracture NATO" by t. Col. Aaron Bazin and Dominika Kunertova; "Readiness and Interoperability in Operation Atlantic Resolve" by Lt. Col. Chad Foster; "The Army's Role in the Future Pacific Theater" by Emily Martin and Samantha Wooley; "Why Alaska and the Arctic are Critical to the National Security of the United States" by Col. Michael J. Forsyth; and "Cyber is the New Air: Domain Superiority in the Megacity" by Maj. Austin G. Commons.
U.S. Army Combined Arms Center
2018-01
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Military Review: The Professional Journal of the U.S. Army [May-June 2017]
This May-June 2017 issue of "Military Review: The Professional Journal of the U.S. Army" features the following articles: "Lawfare 101: A Primer" by Maj. Gen. Charles Dunlap Jr.; "The Heart of the Matter: The Security of Women, The Security of States" by Valerie M. Hudson, Bonnie Ballif-Spanvill, Mary Caprioli, and Chad F. Emmett; "Coping with Noncombatant Women in the Battlespace: Incorporating United Nations Security Council Resolution 1325 into the Operational Environment" by Master Sgt. Vince Lowery; "Stability Operations in Syria: The Need for a Revolution in Civil-Military Affairs" by Anthony H. Cordesman; "The State of Afghanistan's Intelligence Enterprise" by Maj. Gen. Ropbert P. Walters Jr. and Col. Loren G. Traugutt; "Pros and Cons of Autonomous Weapons Systems" by Amitai Etzioni and Oren Itzioni; "New Logistics Ideas for a Complex World" by Col. James Kennedy and Lt. Col. Kris Hughes; "An Underutilized Counterinsurgency Asset: The U.S. Coast Guard" by Daniel E. Ward; "Strategic Scholars: Educating Army Leaders at Foreign Staff Colleges" by Maj. Christopher Gin; and "How to Build an Armadillo: Lessons Learned from the Firs Forward-Deployed THAAD Battery" by Lt. Col. Jonathan C. Stafford.
U.S. Army Combined Arms Center
2017-05
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Military Review: The Professional Journal of the U.S. Army [January-February 2017]
This January-February 2017 issue of "Military Review: The Professional Journal of the U.S. Army" features the following articles: "Against Bureaucracy"; "Reducing the Size of Headquarters, Department of the Army"; "Producing Strategic Value through Deliberate War Planning"; "The Need for a Brigade Politics-and-Policy Staff Officer"; "Expeditionary Land Power: Lessons from the Mexican-American War"; "Cutting Our Feet to Fir the Shoes: An Analysis of Mission Command in the U.S. Army"; "Complex Intelligence Preparation of the Battlefield in Ukranian Antiterrorism Operations"; "Operational Surveillance and Reconnaissance Battalion"; "From Riley to Baku: How an Opportunistic Unit Broke the Crucible"; "Building Digital Lethality"; "Sleep Banking: Improving Fighter Management"; "Leadership Innovation in the Reserve Officer Training Corps and the Future of the Force"; "Creating a Resource: Helping U.S. Army Central Establish a Historical Document Collection Program"; and "Writing: A Way to Maximize Returns on the Army's Investments in Education".
U.S. Army Combined Arms Center
2017-01
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Military Review: The Professional Journal of the U.S. Army [July-August 2017]
This July-August 2017 issue of "Military Review: The Professional Journal of the U.S. Army" features the following articles: "Multi-Domain Battle"; "Curbing the 'Helicopter Commander'"; "The Collapse of Venezuela"; and "Russia's Evolving Way of War".
U.S. Army Combined Arms Center
2017-07
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Military Review, The Professional Journal of the U.S. Army [May-June 2013]
"Military Review is a refereed journal that provides a forum for original thought and debate on the art and science of land warfare and other issues of current interest to the U.S. Army and the Department of Defense. Military Review also supports the education, training, doctrine development, and integration missions of the Combined Arms Center, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas." This May-June 2013 edition includes the following articles: "The Imaginary Army Ethic: A Call for Articulating a Real Foundation for our Profession"; "Improving the Leader Development Experience in Army Units"; "Professionalism and the Officer Personnel Management System"; "Early Mistakes with Security Forces Advisory Teams in Afghanistan"; "To Make Army PME [professional military education] Distance Learning Work, Make It Social"; "The Non-neutrality of Technology: Pitfalls of Network-Enabled Operations"; "The Human Shield in Islamic Jurisprudence"; "Purpose in Mission Design: Understanding the Four Kinds of Operational Approach"; and "Alternate Perspectives: Trying to Think from the Other Side of the Hi".
U.S. Army Combined Arms Center
2013
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Military Review: The Professional Journal of the U.S. Army [January-February 2013]
Military Review is published by the U.S. Army Combined Arms Center. The following titles appear in this edition: "Empirically Based Leadership: Integrating the Science of Psychology in Building a Better Leadership Model"; "Building the New Culture of Training"; "Meritocracy in the Profession of Arms"; "Security Cooperation in Support of Theater Strategy"; "Seizing the Initiative by Establishing the Rule of Law During Combat Operations"; "Army Doctrine Publication 3-0: An Opportunity to Meet the Challenges of the Future"; "'America's Army-Our Profession"'; "Education for Critical Thinking"; "Narcissism and Toxic Leaders"; "Discerning the Role of the Narrative in Strategy Development"; "INSIGHT: Center for Army Leadership Response to 'Empirically Based Leadership'".
U.S. Army Combined Arms Center
2013
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Military Review: The Professional Journal of the U.S. Army [July-August 2013]
The following feature articles are included in this issue of Military Review: "The Future Army: Preparation and Readiness"; "Trafficking Terror through Tajikistan"; "The CTC [Combat Training Centers] Program: Leading the March into the Future"; "Turkey's Role in Afghanistan and Afghan Stabilization"; "Sowing Dragon's Teeth: OSS [Office of Strategic Services] Operational Groups of World War II"; "Joint Operational Access and the Global Response Force: Redefining Readiness"; "The Engaged Leader Paradigm: The Community Health Promotion Council as the Key to Family and Soldier Readiness"; "Design and Operational Art: A Practical Approach to Teaching the Army Design Methodology"; "A More Flexible Army and a More Stable World"; "Women: The Combat Multiplier of Asymmetric Warfare."
U.S. Army Combined Arms Center
2013
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Military Review, The Professional Journal of the U.S. Army [May-June 2014]
"Military Review is a refereed journal that provides a forum for original thought and debate on the art and science of land warfare and other issues of current interest to the U.S. Army and the Department of Defense. Military Review also supports the education, training, doctrine development, and integration missions of the Combined Arms Center, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas." This May-June 2013 edition includes the following articles: "The Imaginary Army Ethic: A Call for Articulating a Real Foundation for our Profession"; "Improving the Leader Development Experience in Army Units"; "Professionalism and the Officer Personnel Management System"; "Early Mistakes with Security Forces Advisory Teams in Afghanistan"; "To Make Army PME [professional military education] Distance Learning Work, Make It Social"; "The Non-neutrality of Technology: Pitfalls of Network-Enabled Operations"; "The Human Shield in Islamic Jurisprudence"; "Purpose in Mission Design: Understanding the Four Kinds of Operational Approach"; and "Alternate Perspectives: Trying to Think from the Other Side of the Hi". This journal is available in Spanish and Brazilian/Portuguese language editions as well as English.
U.S. Army Combined Arms Center
2014
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Military Review: The Professional Journal of the U.S. Army [January-February 2014]
This January-February 2014 issue of the U.S. Army Combined Arms Center's "Military Review" contains the following articles: "Virtual Influence: Leveraging Social Media as a Leadership Tool" by Jana Fajardo, "Preferring Copies with No Originals" by Ben Zweibelson, "A Tale of Two Districts" by Daniel Green, "Of Burning Platforms and Champions" by William Hines, "States, Societies, Resistance, and COIN [Counterinsurgency]" by Samuel Abrams, "Militarization of U.S. Foreign Policy in Africa: Strategic Gain or Backlash?" by Kofi Nsia-Pepra, "The Fourth Revolution: Hyper-Learning" by Frederic Brown, "Lessons of a Coalition Partner in Afghanistan: 2002-2013" by Sholto Stephens, "Harmony in Battle: Training the Brigade Combat Team for Combined Arms Maneuver" by Michael Fenzel and Shane Morgan, "Creeping Death: Clausewitz and Comprehensive Counterinsurgency" by Brett Friedman, and "Managing Risk in Today's Army" by Brendan Gallagher.
U.S. Army Combined Arms Center
2014
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Military Review: The Professional Journal of the U.S. Army [March-April 2015]
This March-April 2015 issue of "Military Review: The Professional Journal of the U.S. Army" features the following articles: "Continuity and Change: The Army Operating Concept and Clear Thinking about Future War" by H.R. McMaster; "SHARP Realities: Perspectives in Tackling the Army's Number One Priority" by Peter Fromm; "Can Trust be Restored?" by Keith Ferguson; "Assignment: Special Assistant to the Commander" by Thomas Galvin; "Women in Combat: The Question of Standards" by Jude Eden; "Women in the Infantry: Understanding Issues of Physical Strength, Economics, and Small-Unit Cohesion" by Charles Rice; "What the Female Engagement Team Experience Can Teach Us About the Future of Women in Combat" by Ashley Nicolas; "The Art of Command and the Science of Control: Brigade Mission Command in Garrison and Operations" by Val Keaveny and Lance Oskey; "Ethics, Combat, and a Soldier's Decision to Kill" by Sean Wead; "Force and Faith in the American Experience" by Isaiah Wilson and Lee Robinson; "The Ignorant Counterinsurgent: Rethinking the Traditional Teacher-Student Relationship in Conflicts" by Ben Zweibelson; "The Anbar Awakening in Context... and Why It Is so Hard to Replicate" by Matthew Penney; "Retaking a District Center: A Case Study in the Application of Village Stability Operations" by Daniel Green; "Air-Sea Battle and the Danger of Fostering a Maginot Line Mentality" by Raymond Millen; and "Killing from the Inside Out: Moral Injury and Just War" by Douglas Pryer.
U.S. Army Combined Arms Center
2015
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Military Review: The Professional Journal of the U.S. Army [November-December 2014]
This November-December 2014 issue of the U.S. Army Combined Arms Center's "Military Review" contains the following articles: "Assurance in Europe: Why Relationships Matter"; "The M1 Abrams: Today and Tomorrow"; "Bringing Mobility to the Infantry Brigade Combat Team"; "Losing Our Way: The Disassociation of Reconnaissance and Security Organizations from Screen, Guard, and Cover Missions"; "The Pen and the Sword: The New Noncommissioned Officer Professional Development System - NCO 2020"; "Army Learning Concept 2015 is Underway"; "The Challenge of Countering Weapons of Mass Destruction on the Korean Peninsula"; "Survivability, Sustainability, and Maneuverability: The Need for Joint Unity of Effort in Implementing the DOD Arctic Strategy at the Tactical and Operational Levels"; "What Lessons Did We Learn (or Re-Learn) About Military Advising After 9/11?"; "Operational Serval: Another Beau Geste of France in Sub-Saharan Africa?"; "Entanglement: Using Social Network Analysis for Military Justice Applications"; "Leveraging the Power of Loyal Dissent in the U.S. Army"; "Two Faces of Critical Thinking for the Reflective Military Practitioner"; and "No Shortage of Campfires: Keeping the Army Adaptable, Agile, and Innovative in the Austere Times".
U.S. Army Combined Arms Center
2014
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Military Review, The Professional Journal of the U.S. Army [January-February 2015]
"Military Review is a refereed journal that provides a forum for original thought and debate on the art and science of land warfare and other issues of current interest to the U.S. Army and the Department of Defense. Military Review also supports the education, training, doctrine development, and integration missions of the Combined Arms Center, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas." This January-February 2015 edition includes the following articles: ""Toward a Strong and Sustainable Defense Enterprise" by Chuck Hagel; "International Security Assistance Force joint Command 2014" by Joseph Anderson and Matthew M. McCreary; "Preparing Soldiers for Uncertainty" by Jonathan Due, Nathan Finney, and Joe Byerly; "A Paradigm of Dialogue and Trust" by Robert Scaife and Packard J. Mills; "Deniers of 'The Truth:' Why an Agnostic Approach to Warefare is Key" by Grant M. Martin; "Back to the Future: Managing Training to 'Win in a Complex World'" by Paul Lushenko and David Hammerschmidt; "The Training Brain Repository--Exercise Design Tool for Home-Station Training" by David G. Paschal and Alan L. Gunnerson; "Perfection of Process Does Not Equal Perfect Understanding" by David Oakley; "Networking and Generalship Across the Anglo-Pacific" by Matt Cavanaugh and Nick Howard; "Winning Trust Under Fire" by Aaron A. Bazin; "Ethics and the Enhanced Soldier of the Near Future" by Dave Shunk; "Is a Greater Russia Really So Bad?" by George Michael; "Operation Atlantic Resolve: A Case Study in Effective Communication Strategy" by Jesse Granger; and "A Raid Too Far: Operation Lam Son 719 and Vietnamization in Laos and Invation of Laos, 1971: Lam Son 719" by Thomas E. Hanson.
U.S. Army Combined Arms Center
2015-01
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Military Review, The Professional Journal of the U.S. Army [July-August 2014]
"Military Review is a refereed journal that provides a forum for original thought and debate on the art and science of land warfare and other issues of current interest to the U.S. Army and the Department of Defense. Military Review also supports the education, training, doctrine development, and integration missions of the Combined Arms Center, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas." This July-August 2014 edition includes the following articles "Cadets in Strategic Landpower: Managing the Talent We Need"; "Our Strategic Understanding: Teaching Strategy from the Ground Up"; "Defining Force 2025"; "Strategic Leadership for Strategic Landpower: Make Explicit That Which is Implicit, and Do What Your Boss Needs You to Do"; "Hurtling Toward Failure: Complexity in Army Operations"; "Sustaining the Army National Guard as an Operational Force"; "The Defense Entrepreneurs Forum: Developing a Culture of Innovation"; "War as Political Work: Using Social Science for Strategic Success"; "Army Experimentation: Developing the Army of the Future - Army 2010"; "The Rise of Al Jazeera: The Need for Greater Engagement by the U.S. Department of Defense"; "You are Fired"; "America's Frontier Wars: Lessons for Asymmetric Conflicts"; and "Rape in Wartime".
U.S. Army Combined Arms Center
2014
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Military Review: The Professional Journal of the U.S. Army [July-August 2014]
The following feature articles are included in this July-August 2014 issue of "Military Review": "Cadets in Strategic Landpower: Managing the Talent We Need"; "On Strategic Understanding: Teaching Strategy from the Ground Up"; "Defining Force 2025"; "Strategic Leadership for Strategic Landpower: Make Explicit That Which is Implicit, and Do What Your Boss Needs You to Do"; "Hurtling Toward Failure: Complexity in Army Operations"; "Sustaining the Army National Guard as an Operational Force"; "The Defense Entrepreneurs Forum: Developing a Culture of Innovation"; "War as Political Work: Using Social Science for Strategic Success"; "Army Experimentation: Developing the Army of the Future - Army 2020"; "The Rise of Al Jazeera: The Need for Greater Engagement by the U.S. Department of Defense"; "You Are Fired"; and "America's Frontier Wars: Lessons for Asymmetric Conflicts".
U.S. Army Combined Arms Center
2014
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Military Review: The Professional Journal of the U.S. Army [September-October 2013]
This September-October 2013 issue of the U.S. Army Combined Arms Center's "Military Review" contains the following articles: "Trust Erosion and Identity Corrosion"; "Fighting Alone: The Challenge of Shrinking Social Capital and the Army Profession"; "Defeating Future Hybrid Threats: The Greatest Challenge to the Army Profession of 2020 and Beyond"; "Character Development of U.S. Army Leaders: The Laissez- Faire Approach"; "The Trust Lapse: How Our Profession's Bedrock is Being Undermined"; "Uninformed, not Uniformed? The Apolitical Myth"; "The Myths We Soldiers Tell Ourselves (and the Harm These Myths Do)"; "The Greatest Threat Facing the Army Profession'; "Trust: Implications for the Army Profession"; and "Remembering Vietnam."
U.S. Army Combined Arms Center
2013
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Military Review: The Professional Journal of the U.S. Army [May-June 2014]
The following feature articles are included in this May-June 2014 issue of "Military Review": "Considerations for Offensive Cyberspace Operations"; "Responsibility Practices in Robotic Warfare"; "Failed Cyberdefense: The Environmental Consequences of Hostile Acts"; "The Utility of Cyberpower"; "Beyond Cocaine Cowboys: Looking at Security in Latin America From a Different Perspective"; "Cybersecurity: It Isn't Just for Signal Officers Anymore"; "Network-Centric Warfare and the Data-Information-Knowledge-Wisdom Hierarchy"; "Is There Room for Peace Studies in a Future-Centered Warfighting Curriculum?"; "Medical Operations in Counterinsurgency: Joining the Fight"; and "Persistent Conflict and Special Operations Forces".
U.S. Army Combined Arms Center
2014
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Military Review: The Professional Journal of the U.S. Army [March-April 2014]
The following articles are featured in this March-April 2014 edition of "Military Review": "Strengths-Based Leadership Theory and Development of Subordinate Leaders"; "Developing Trustworthy Commissioned Officers"; "Evil on the Horizon"; "Extending SHARP Best Practices"; "Is Experience the Missing Link in Junior Officer Development?"; "The Syrian Crisis from a Neighbor's Perspective"; "The Criticality of Captains' Education"; "Ethics Education of Military Leaders"; "Improving Leader Development in the Operational Domain"; and "Leading Structured Organization in the Dynamic Information Age".
U.S. Army Combined Arms Center
2014
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Military Review: The Professional Journal of the U.S. Army [January-February 2016]
This March-April 2016 issue of "Military Review: The Professional Journal of the U.S. Army" features the following articles: "The Future of War: How Globalization is Changing the Security Paradigm" by Johnny Sokolosky Jr.; "Comments by Russian President Vladimir Putin to the UN General Assembly" by Vladimir Putin; "The Value of Science Is in the Foresight: New Challenges Demand Rethinking the Forms and Methods of Carrying Out Combat Operations" by Valery Gerasimov; "Getting Gerasimov Right" by Charles K. Bartles; "The Future of Warfare Against Islamic Jihadism: Engaging and Defeating Nonstate, Nonuniformed, Unlawful Enemy Combatants" by Allen B. West; "Jordanian Society's Responses to Syrian Refugees" by Walter C. Haynes; "Criminal Networks in Venezuela: Their Impact on Hemispheric Security" by Leopoldo E. Colmenares G.; "The Army, Engagement, and America's Pacific Century" by Daniel Gibson and Jon Cheatwood; "The Rise of Leftist Populism -- A Challenge to Democracy?" by Jonathan Bissell; "Action Research: A Systematic Approach to the Social Component of the Human Dimension" by William Hardy and Joseph Rodman; "Winning the Fight on Sexual Assault in our Army: Starting in Basic Combat Training" by Bryan Hernandez; "Lessons from Yusufiyah: From Black Hearts to Moral Education" by Saythala Lay Phonexayphova; and "Military Operations in Megacities: A Linguistic Perspective" by Jeff R. Watson.
U.S. Army Combined Arms Center
2016
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Military Review: The Professional Journal of the U.S. Army [May-June 2015]
This May-June 2015 issue of "Military Review: The Professional Journal of the U.S. Army" features the following articles: "Future Megacity Operations - Lessons from Sadr City" by Christopher O. Bowers; "Identifying and Retaining the Army's Best Midgrade Officers" by Ronald Kirklin; "Operational Resilience in the Infantry Rifle Platoon" by Don H. Gomez and Samuel S. Heer; "Psychologically Fit to Lead" by Gregory C. Mabry Jr.; "Great Results Through Bad Leaders" by Kane David Wright; "The Path to Mission Command" by Andrew J. Whitford; "Stryker Packages Allow the Army to Achieve Its Rapid Deployment Goal" by Daniel Hall; "1930s German Doctrine" by Tal Tovy; "The Advisor and the Brigade Combat Team" by Jeremy T. Gwinn; "Army Civilians and the Army Profession" by Robert Hynes; "It's Not About Trust; It's About Thinking and Judgment" by Joe Doty and Jeff Fenlason; and "I Heard My Country Calling" by Tom J. Tracy.
U.S. Army Combined Arms Center
2015
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Military Review, The Professional Journal of the U.S. Army [September-October 2014]
"Military Review is a refereed journal that provides a forum for original thought and debate on the art and science of land warfare and other issues of current interest to the U.S. Army and the Department of Defense. Military Review also supports the education, training, doctrine development, and integration missions of the Combined Arms Center, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas." This September-October 2014 edition includes the following articles: "Noncommissioned Officers and Mission Command"; "U.S. Army Physical Readiness Training Protocols"; "Building Partnership Capacity 101: The New Jordan Armed Forces Noncommissioned Officer Corps"; "NCO [Noncommissioned Officers] 2020: A Concept for Self-Paced Learning in the Noncommissioned Officer Education System"; "The Role of Character in Effective Leadership"; "Afghanistan Endgame: Lessons from Cambodia 1973-1975"; "Transformational Stories: How the Weekend Safety Briefing can be a Forum for the Professional Military Ethic"; "The Importance of Teaching Followership in Professional Military Education"; "Macro-Ethics and Tactical Decision Making"; "The Human Domain: The Army's Necessary Push Toward Squishiness"; "Retaining the Warrior Spirit"; "The Morality on Intervention by Waging Irregular Warfare"; and "Head Strong: How Psychology is Revolutionizing War."
U.S. Army Combined Arms Center
2014