The danger of military success
Planners cling to battle-tested doctrine, but the world is changing
Most American military specialists know about Stonewall Jackson and Ulysses S. Grant, but not many study the Duke of Wellington and his …
Read more ›Most American military specialists know about Stonewall Jackson and Ulysses S. Grant, but not many study the Duke of Wellington and his …
Read more ›Active-duty officers have long been required to earn their joint qualifications before pinning on a flag officer’s stars; it’s time to help …
Read more ›To the Coast Guard for its inability to speak clearly.
Certainly, the other military services — and indeed, most complex organizations — labor under the handicaps of bureaucrat-speak and the fuzzy thinking …
Read more ›To the F-35 program for an apparently rousing start to sea trials for the Marine Corps’ B variant.
After two weeks and dozens of short takeoffs and vertical landings, the test aircraft …
Read more ›There’s been a lot of discussion recently about the challenges faced by Defense Secretary Leon Panetta as he works to manage the …
Read more ›In a recent New York Times op-ed, Princeton Professor Aaron L. Friedberg focused on China’s asymmetric “anti-access/area-denial” strategies, operations and weapons that could neutralize …
Read more ›A year ago, in an article published at the Center for European Policy Analysis, we argued that “some voices increasingly insist that the age …
Read more ›Shortly after 9 p.m. on Dec. 6, 2001, machine-gun fire erupted on the perimeter of Camp Rhino, Afghanistan. Capt. Mike Flatten, an Air Force officer …
Read more ›Strategic, operational and tactical mobility for U.S. ground forces presents problems more fundamental than any anti-access and area denial efforts by our adversaries.
The dramatic reduction …
Read more ›I agree with the major, in part, that money can be saved by requiring all officers, regardless of component, to complete ILE by means other than the resident course. However, Bonham is …
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