Strategy and Force Planning

Strategy and Force Planning
Author: Joshua M. Epstein
Publisher:
Total Pages: 224
Release: 1987
Genre: Political Science
ISBN:

Denne bog beskriver 3 forskellige strategiske metoder som U.S.A. kunne bruge i Golf-staterne for at afskrække en Sovjetisk agression i området.

Strategy and Force Planning

Strategy and Force Planning
Author: Richmond M. Lloyd
Publisher:
Total Pages: 634
Release: 1995
Genre: Military planning
ISBN: 9781884733055

The very best in thinking about national military security strategy (NMSS). A one-volume intro. to, and overview of, strategy and force planing. Explores the political, economic, and mil. components of NMSS; examines broad force planning concepts; and analyzes the development of future forces in support of the NMSS. Presents a wide range of articles on national security requirements, strategy, and resources. Chapters: strategic thinking and conceptual frameworks; perspectives on international relations; national interests and grand strategies; economic strategies; diplomatic strategies; competing geostrategic perspectives; military strategy and force planning; and perspectives on the future.

Strategy and Force Planning

Strategy and Force Planning
Author: United States Government Printing Office
Publisher: Defense Department
Total Pages: 695
Release: 2004-04-01
Genre:
ISBN: 9780160680328

Strategic Planning for Coalition Warfare, 1941-1942

Strategic Planning for Coalition Warfare, 1941-1942
Author: Maurice Matloff
Publisher:
Total Pages: 490
Release: 1953
Genre: Strategy
ISBN:

A description of wartime national planning and military strategy as they affected the missions and dispositions of the U.S. Army in the defensive phase of coalition warfare.

U.S. Army War College Guide to Strategy

U.S. Army War College Guide to Strategy
Author: Joseph R. Cerami
Publisher: Strategic Studies Institute
Total Pages: 282
Release: 2001
Genre: History
ISBN: 1584870338

For more than 3 decades, the U.S. Army War College (USAWC) Department of National Security and Strategy has faced the challenge of educating future strategic leaders on the subject of national security, or grand strategy. Fitting at the top of an officer's or government official's career-long professional development program, this challenge has been to design a course on strategy that incorporates its many facets in a short period of time, all within the 1-year, senior service college curriculum. To do this, a conceptual approach has provided the framework to think about strategy formulation. The purpose of this volume is to present the USAWC strategy formulation model to students and practitioners. This book serves as a guide to one method for the formulation, analysis, and study of strategy--an approach which we have found to be useful in providing generations of strategists with the conceptual tools to think systematically, strategically, critically, creatively, and big. Balancing what is described in the chapters as ends, ways, and means remains at the core of the Army War College's approach to national security and military strategy and strategy formulation.

A Composite Approach to Air Force Planning

A Composite Approach to Air Force Planning
Author: Paul K. Davis
Publisher: RAND Corporation
Total Pages: 0
Release: 1996
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780833024336

After the 1996 Presidential election, the Department of Defense (DoD) will probably conduct a major review of national military strategy and the current basis of force planning, the Bottom-Up Review. In preparation for this review, what issues should the Air Force consider, what planning methods should be brought to bear, and when? The authors address these questions and note that there is no single best planning method. Different methods focus on and deal with different generic planning activities, and no method stands alone or constitutes a complete methodology. If undertaken by creative minds, most of the techniques discussed here will do a good job for the Air Force (and for the DoD more generally). But it is particularly important to allow and encourage participants to break the shackles of conventional wisdom--not only about current realities, but about what the nature of the future will be, about what "good" strategic planners are "supposed" to assume about the future, and what types and levels of forces are allegedly "required."