Clarifying Relationships Between Objectives, Effects, and End States With Illustrations and Lessons from the Vietnam War - Maxwell Taylor, McNamara, Von Clausewitz

Clarifying Relationships Between Objectives, Effects, and End States With Illustrations and Lessons from the Vietnam War - Maxwell Taylor, McNamara, Von Clausewitz
Author: U. S. Military
Publisher:
Total Pages: 125
Release: 2018-01-08
Genre:
ISBN: 9781976836145

This military study examines the roles and relationships of objectives, effects and end states across the strategic and operational levels of war in order to provide greater clarity for campaign planners. With its inclusion in the recently updated joint doctrine on planning, the effects-based approach to operations attempts to capture the latest insights on warfare. Unfortunately, the new joint doctrine fails to clearly articulate its advantages and scope of applicability, allows inconsistencies internal to itself and with previous doctrine to remain, and causes confusion in formerly well-understood concepts. With the goal of providing a more consistent framework than that offered by joint doctrine, this study, supported by lessons from the Vietnam War, examines why the nesting of objectives, effects and end states must be understood in order to successfully design campaigns to achieve strategic ends. This study attempts to close some existing gaps in joint doctrine. Specifically, it explores the roles and relationships of end states, objectives, and effects across the strategic and operational levels of war. It seeks to show how a more complete understanding of these roles and relationships will enhance joint operation planning, or the "planning activities associated [with] joint military operations by combatant commanders and their subordinate joint force commanders in response to contingencies and crises." Hopefully, it will serve to drive discussion and further innovation. Perhaps it might even provide some practical utility for the planners or doctrine writers who read it. However, in the end, those who disagree with its contents must articulate their counter-arguments, which in and of itself would satisfy the purpose of this study: to provide greater clarity for the military planners who must go forth and develop American military campaigns for the present and future. INTRODUCTION * Purpose * Scope * Current Doctrine * Problem * Thesis * Method * CHAPTER 1 * BACKGROUND TERMS AND CONCEPTS * Conceptual Levels of War * The Environment * Planning Frameworks and Processes * Forms of Military Action * CHAPTER 2 * CLARIFYING THE ROLE OF OBJECTIVES * Objective of War and the Military Objective in War * Objective as a Principle for the Conduct of Military Operations * Practical Conclusions about Objectives * CHAPTER 3 * CLARIFYING THE OBJECTIVE-END STATE RELATIONSHIP * Recent Confusion of End States and Termination * National Strategic End States (The Simple Case) * National Strategic End States and Termination (The Complex Case) * Military Strategic End States * CHAPTER 4 * OBJECTIVE-END STATE RELATIONSHIPS IN THE VIETNAM WAR * Nesting of Regional and Global National Strategies * The Contribution of National Instruments to National Strategies * CHAPTER 5 * INTRODUCTION OF EFFECTS INTO OPERATIONAL DESIGN * Brief History of Effects-based Approaches * Brief Summary of Current Approach * CHAPTER 6 * THE ROLE OF EFFECTS IN RELATION TO OBJECTIVES AND END STATES * The Basic Definition of an Effect * A Clear Relationship between Effects and End States * How Effects Relate Objectives to End States * Utility at the Strategic Level of War * Utility at the Operational Level of War * CHAPTER 7 * VIETNAM WAR'S LESSONS FOR END STATES AND EFFECTS * The Importance of Timing Effects * The Importance of Focusing on Conditions * The Importance of Re-evaluating End States

Air Power and the Ground War in Vietnam

Air Power and the Ground War in Vietnam
Author: Donald J. Mrozek
Publisher: The Minerva Group, Inc.
Total Pages: 220
Release: 2002
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780898759815

Dr. Donald J. Mrozeks research sheds considerable light on how the use of air power evolved in the Vietnam War. Much more than simply retelling events, Mrozek analyzes how history, politics, technology, and the complexity of the war drove the application of air power in a long and divisive struggle. Mrozek delves into a wealth of original documentation, and his scholarship is impeccable. His analysis is thorough and balanced. His conclusions are well reasoned but will trouble those who have never seriously considered how the application of air power is influenced by factors far beyond the battlefield. Wether or not the reader agrees with Mrozek, the quality of his research and analysis makes his conclusions impossible to ignore. John C. Fryer, Jr. Brigadier General, United States Air Force Commander, Center for Aerospace Doctrine, Research and Education

Interactive War in Vietnam

Interactive War in Vietnam
Author: Ron Chilcote
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 200?
Genre: Vietnam War, 1961-1975
ISBN:

This essay uses Carl von Clausewitz's theories on war to critique US national and military strategy in the Vietnam War. It argues that US policy makers failed to apply two key Clausewitzian concepts. First is the idea that war is a complex, non-linear interaction between states. Resulting from this failure, US leaders failed to recognize the true nature of the war- that is the political context which shaped it, the motives which prompted its energy to engage in it, and the form it would take. Furthermore, they conducted the war based upon a linear construct which envisioned the carefully "calibrated," controlled and gradual escalated use of power would produce a predictable and desirable response from the enemy. The second key Clausewitzian concept not applied by US leaders is that although war is non-linear in its nature, linearity must exist in the proportional relationship between military means (and costs) and the political ends they are designed to attain. The US mistake is this regard was that it embarked on the war with a disproportionate relationship between its political aim and its military means. In effect, the means it was willing to apply (and the costs it was willing to pay) were insufficient to achieve the desired aim vis a vis the means and ends of its opponent. The essay is divided into four parts. The first two examine Clausewitz's concepts of the non-linearity and linearity of war. The second two use these concepts to critique the US strategy in Vietnam.

The US Air Force after Vietnam : postwar challenges and potential for responses

The US Air Force after Vietnam : postwar challenges and potential for responses
Author: Donald J. Mrozek
Publisher: DIANE Publishing
Total Pages: 142
Release: 2001
Genre: Public opinion
ISBN: 1428993347

This book probes various groups of Americans as they come to grips with the consequences of the Vietnam War. Dr. Mrozek examines several areas of concern facing the United States Air Force, and the other services in varying degrees, in the years after Vietnam.

Interactive War in Vietnam. Pulverizing the Core Versus Nibbling at the Edges

Interactive War in Vietnam. Pulverizing the Core Versus Nibbling at the Edges
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 13
Release: 1997
Genre:
ISBN:

This essay uses Carl von Clausewitz's theories on war to critique US national and military strategy in the Vietnam War. It argues that US policy makers failed to apply two key Clausewitzian concepts. First is the idea that war is a complex, non-linear interaction between states. Resulting from this failure, US leaders failed to recognize the true nature of the war- that is the political context which shaped it, the motives which prompted its energy to engage in it, and the form it would take. Furthermore, they conducted the war based upon a linear construct which envisioned the carefully "calibrated," controlled and gradual escalated use of power would produce a predictable and desirable response from the enemy. The second key Clausewitzian concept not applied by US leaders is that although war is non-linear in its nature, linearity must exist in the proportional relationship between military means (and costs) and the political ends they are designed to attain. The US mistake is this regard was that it embarked on the war with a disproportionate relationship between its political aim and its military means. In effect, the means it was willing to apply (and the costs it was willing to pay) were insufficient to achieve the desired aim vis a vis the means and ends of its opponent. The essay is divided into four parts. The first two will examine Clausewitz's concepts of the non-linearity and linearity of war. The second two will use these concepts to critique the US strategy in Vietnam.

Analysis of American Policy Concerning Conduct of the Vietnam War as Reflected in the Chicago Tribune, 1966-1969, Using a Theoretical Model Derived from Clausewitz

Analysis of American Policy Concerning Conduct of the Vietnam War as Reflected in the Chicago Tribune, 1966-1969, Using a Theoretical Model Derived from Clausewitz
Author: William D. Darley
Publisher:
Total Pages: 149
Release: 1988
Genre:
ISBN:

This study examined U.S. policy concerning the Vietnam War as reflected in news reports appearing in the Chicago Tribune from 1966 through 1969. News reports treating war policy and their possible effects on American society were analyzed using a theoretical model derived from the philosophical treatise On War which was written by the 19th Century soldier-philosopher Karl Von Clausewitz. This study focused on characteristics of policy on light of Clausewitz's assertions concerning the importance of both stimulating and maintaining a unity of purpose among what he called the 'moral forces' of the state in order to successfully prosecute a war. This study was undertaken to explore and help explain the relationship among the press, the government and the people during periods of military conflict. Theses. (fr).

Consequences of Failure

Consequences of Failure
Author: William R. Corson
Publisher: W. W. Norton
Total Pages: 216
Release: 1974-02
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780393337433

The author of The Betrayal assesses the effects of the Vietnam War on our government, our military establishment, on our economy, and on ourselves."

Limited War in a Revolutionary Setting: Application of Clausewitz's Principles in the Vietnam Conflict

Limited War in a Revolutionary Setting: Application of Clausewitz's Principles in the Vietnam Conflict
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 47
Release: 2002
Genre:
ISBN:

The United States failed to consider Clausewitz's principles for the relationship between the political and military objectives in a war while North Vietnam gave primacy to the political objective, ensuring all other efforts supported it. The strategy adopted by the Johnson administration to wage the Vietnam War failed to provide clear objectives to govern the military action. Gradual response allowed the North Vietnamese time to adapt to changes enacted by the American forces. By the Tet Offensive in 1968, American public opinion and portions of the government would no longer support the war and sought an end of United States involvement in South Vietnam. The North Vietnamese realized they faced a superior enemy and utilized tactics that countered the American way of war. The primary goal and focus of the North Vietnamese effort remained the political objective throughout the war and all other action (military, psychological, economic, and diplomatic) supported the accomplishment of this goal.

War and Responsibility

War and Responsibility
Author: John Hart Ely
Publisher:
Total Pages: 244
Release: 1993-10-01
Genre: Law
ISBN: 9780756760908

John Ely, formerly a prof. of constitutional Law at Harvard Univ. and now a at Stanford Univ., presents a patient and careful examination of Congress's role in the authorization of the Vietnam War. He argues that the framers of the Constitution clearly intended to give Congress a decisive voice in a decision to go to war, but that Congress itself has repeatedly evaded this responsibility. The book is a detailed and tightly analyzed summary of recent uses of the war power. It is of value to anyone teaching about the presidency or concerned at the clash that sometimes exists between the power of the modern presidency and the tenets of American democracy. "Destined to become a classic." "Belongs on the bookshelf of anyone teaching about the Presidency."