|
Showing 1 - 11 of
11 matches in All Departments
Military theorists such as David Alberts contend that information
technologies will allow for wider and more rapid sharing of
information. In order to take advantage of the emerging
possibilities presented by information technologies the theorists
recommend changes to the structure of information age military
organizations and changes to the methods for command and control of
military forces. Some of their ideas have implications for the
traditional function of command. This monograph asks how
contemporary military theorists account for the essence of command
in information age theories of warfare. Case studies of Frederick
the Great, Napoleon Bonaparte, and Dwight D. Eisenhower demonstrate
that the essence of command is the dynamic relationship among nine
imperatives. These imperatives include context, action, nerve,
presentation, design, intellect, expertise, coherence, and the
individual. The monograph contends that the emerging information
age theories of warfare are flawed because they are based on a
definition of command that does not account for these imperatives.
The monograph serves as a warning to those who might seek to
optimize an army for network centric warfare.
Australian Bushcraft is the Granddaddy of them all. Written by the
Australian Army Education Service in 1943, this book gets back to
basics. Forget Bear Grylls-style urine-drinking, this is the real
deal information written by old soldiers who had Been There &
Done That the hard way, before helicopter rescue, before PLBs and
before GPS. Chapters cover firemaking without matches, procuring
water from the environment, procuring animal and plant food by
foraging and with snares, as well as developing an eye for
"country." This is back to basics without the hype. Forgotten
bushcraft wisdom, some of which you just won't find in a modern
military survival manual.
|
|