Pure Strategy

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A01=Everett Dolman
adaptation in conflict
adaptive
Army
Author_Everett Dolman
Category=JPS
Cellular Automata
Circuitous
Class Ii
Coin Toss
complex
Complex Adaptive Systems
complexity in warfare
Dense
Emergent Behavior
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Follow
Ground Forces
level
master
Master Strategists
Master Tactician
military theory
Net-centric Warfare
Network-centric Warfare
Non-commissioned Officers
Noncombatants
ongoing state rivalry analysis
operational
operational planning
political competition
post-War
Pure Strategy
strategic decision making
system
tactical
Tactical Decision Maker
Tactical Genius
Tactical Logic
Tactical Thinker
Tactical Victory
tactician
Unlimited
victory
Violated
war

Product details

  • ISBN 9780714656052
  • Weight: 760g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 14 Apr 2005
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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A stimulating new inquiry into the fundamental truth of strategy - its purpose, place, utility, and value.

This new study is animated by a startling realization: the concept of strategic victory must be summarily discarded. This is not to say that victory has no place in strategy or strategic planning. The outcome of battles and campaigns are variables within the strategist's plan, but victory is a concept that has no meaning there.

To the tactical and operational planner, wars are indeed won and lost, and the difference is plain. Success is measurable; failure is obvious. In contrast, the pure strategist understands that war is but one aspect of social and political competition, an ongoing interaction that has no finality. Strategy therefore connects the conduct of war with the intent of politics. It shapes and guides military means in anticipation of a panoply of possible coming events. In the process, strategy changes the context within which events will happen. In this new book we see clearly that the goal of strategy is not to culminate events, to establish finality in the discourse between states, but to continue them; to influence state discourse in such a way that it will go forward on favorable terms. For continue it will. This book will provoke debate and stimulate new thinking across the field and strategic studies.

Everett Carl Dolman is Professor of Strategy at the US Air Force's Air War College (AWC) and Visiting Professor of Space Strategy at Johns Hopkins University, SAIS.

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