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Recent military interventions in Haiti, Somalia, Iraq, and
elsewhere confirm the axiom that it is possible to win every battle
and yet still manage to lose a war. Although the United States has
developed a method of warfare that can produce stunning battlefield
victories, those battlefield victories do not necessarily
accomplish the strategic objectives for which the war was fought.
Contemporary United States strategy requires the Army to do more
than fight and win in the traditional sense; it requires a force
that can intervene in failed, failing, or rogue states, stabilize
those states, and facilitate their transformation into productive
members of the international community. The United States Army has
a fundamental, perhaps decisive role in ensuring that battlefield
victories are translated into strategic success. The central
research question is: What should the Army do to improve its
ability to conduct intervention, stabilization, and transformation
operations? To help answer this question, this thesis examines the
essential nature of this new mission and deduces the Army's proper
role. It further analyzes the Army's deficiencies in performing
that role. Finally, recommendations are made to address these
deficiencies.
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