Effects-Based Operations and the Exercise of National Power

Abstract

The world is connected globally in societal, economic, governmental, and infostructural and infrastructural terms. As the United States faces 21st-century adversaries and national security challenges, it must acknowledge these threats as being distributed, networked, urban, and different from the 20th-century, nation-state, and military-power constructs it has historically organized against. Acting against such threats in traditional ways will be too costly, slow, and destructive. Adversaries will increasingly use new forms of warfare, networkbased organizations, and exponentially increased levels of destructive effect to wage war. Effects-based operations, as a core competency of future warfare, will leverage allies' kinetic and nonkinetic capabilities with global reaching effects. Current and future generations of officers, interagency partners, and the Nation need to understand, enhance, and embrace existing and emerging technologies and techniques that enable these capabilities. The military must now establish-in the mainstream defense community-new doctrine, organizations, training, leadership, materiel, and personnel systems to ensure the Nation is prepared to execute and defend against emerging forms of warfare.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Feb 01, 2004
Accession Number
ADA523812

Entities

People

  • David W. Pendall

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Cyber
  • Energy and Power Technologies
  • Human Systems
  • Sensors
  • Space

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Air Force
  • Contingency Operations (Military)
  • Employment
  • Homeland Defense
  • Homeland Security
  • Information Operations
  • Information Warfare
  • Law Enforcement Officers
  • National Security
  • New York
  • Psychological Operations
  • Scatterable Mines
  • Terrorism
  • Terrorists
  • United States
  • Warfare
  • Weapons Effects

Readers

  • Economics
  • Irregular Warfare and Special Operations Cyberspace Operations against Adversarial Threats.
  • Strategic Security Studies