Другие журналы на сайте ИНТЕЛРОС

JFQ 66 (3nd Quarter, July 2012)

JFQ 66 (3nd Quarter, July 2012) Achieving Force Resilience
There is still controversy over whether war is a science or an art. Efforts to define war as entirely a science have failed. Scientific methods are essential in explaining what occurs in war, and business models aid in managing military organization, planning forces, and designing weapons. Quantifying has its place, but these methods are less suitable as one approaches the operational and strategic levels. A knowledge and understanding of war must be based on science, but its actual conduct is largely an art. Scientific and technological advances will not change that reality. The character of war may alter substantially, yet its nature in the Clausewitzian sense will remain. Seeking to make war simple, predictable, and thus controllable will collapse under the larger weight of such intangibles as the human factor and the psychological elements, which will always ensure there is a fog of war… Milan Vego. Science vs. the Art of War

СОДЕРЖАНИЕ:

From the Chairman

Curtis L. Brownhill
Developing Joint Force Officer-Enlisted Leadership Capacity for the 21st Century

Executive Summary

Vincent Manzo
Deterrence and Escalation in Cross-domain Operations: Where Do Space and Cyberspace Fit?

Soren Olson
Shadow Boxing: Cyber Warfare and Strategic Economic Attack

Rosemary M. Carter, Brent Feick, and Roy C. Undersander
Offensive Cyber for the Joint Force Commander: It's Not That Different

Rhonda Cornum, Thomas D. Vail, and Paul B. Lester
Resilience: The Result of a Totally Fit Force

Patrick J. Sweeney, Jeffrey E. Rhodes, and Bruce Boling
Spiritual Fitness: Key Component of Total Force Fitness

Carlo Kopp
Technological Strategy in the Age of Exponential Growth

Benjamin S. Lambeth
Forging Jointness Under Fire: Air-Ground Integration in Isreal's Lebanon and Gaza Wars

Lee T. Wight
Airpower Dollars and Sense: Rethinking the Relative Costs of Combat

Milan Vego
Science vs. the Art of War

Tracy J. Tafolla, David J. Trachtenberg, and John A. Aho
From Niche to Necessity: Integrating Nonlethal Weapons into Essential Enabling Capabilities

Eric Braganca
The V-22 Osprey: From Troubled Past to Viable and Flexible Option

Robbin F. Laird and Edward T. Timperlake
The F-35 and the Future of Power Projection

David A. Anderson
BOOK REVIEW Keep From All Thoughtful Men: How U.S. Economists Won World War II

Francis P. Sempa
BOOK REVIEW The Shaping of Grand Strategy: Policy, Diplomacy, and War

Robert Daniel Wallace
BOOK REVIEW Defiant Failed State: The North Korean Threat to International Security

George E. Katsos
The United Nations and Intergovernmental Organization Command Relationships: Part III of III

Архив журнала
№85, 2017№86, 2017№84, 2016№83, 2016№82, 2016№81, 2016№80, 2016№79, 2015№78, 2015№77, 2015№76, 2015№75, 2014№74, 2014№73, 2014№72, 2013№71, 2013№70, 2013№69, 2013№68, 2013№67, 2012№66, 2012№65, 2012№64, 2012№63, 2011№62, 2011№60, 2011№59, 2010№58, 2010№57, 2010
Поддержите нас
Журналы клуба