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midnight rambler
21st January 2012, 10:05 PM
Known Unknowns: Unconventional "Strategic Shocks" in Defense Strategy Development

Authored by Mr. Nathan P. Freier (http://www.strategicstudiesinstitute.army.mil/pubs/people.cfm?authorID=552). | November 2008
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A Summary

The current defense team confronted a game-changing “strategic shock” in its first 8 months in office. The next team would be well-advised to expect the same. Defense-relevant strategic shocks jolt convention to such an extent that they force sudden, unanticipated change in the Department of Defense’s (DoD) perceptions about threat, vulnerability, and strategic response. Their unanticipated onset forces the entire defense enterprise to reorient and restructure institutions, employ capabilities in unexpected ways, and confront challenges that are fundamentally different than those routinely considered in defense calculations.
The likeliest and most dangerous future shocks will be unconventional. They will not emerge from thunderbolt advances in an opponent’s military capabilities. Rather, they will manifest themselves in ways far outside established defense convention. Most will be nonmilitary in origin and character, and not, by definition, defense-specific events conducive to the conventional employment of the DoD enterprise.
They will rise from an analytical no man’s land separating well-considered, stock and trade defense contingencies and pure defense speculation. Their origin is most likely to be in irregular, catastrophic, and hybrid threats of “purpose” (emerging from hostile design) or threats of “context” (emerging in the absence of hostile purpose or design). Of the two, the latter is both the least understood and the most dangerous.
Thoughtful evaluation of defense-relevant strategic shocks and their deliberate integration into DoD strategy and planning is a key check against excessive convention. Further, it underwrites DoD relevance and resilience. Prior anticipation of September 11, 2001 (9/11) or the Iraq insurgency, for example, might have limited the scope and impact of the shock. In both instances, wrenching periods of post-event self-examination did help solve our current or last problem. They may not have been as effective in solving our next one.
DoD is now doing valuable work on strategic shocks. This work must endure and mature through the upcoming political transition. The next defense team should scan the myriad waypoints and end points along dangerous trend lines, as well as the prospect for sudden, discontinuous breaks in trends altogether to identify the next shock or shocks. Doing so is a prudent hedge against an uncertain and dangerous future.

http://www.strategicstudiesinstitute.army.mil/Pubs/Display.Cfm?pubID=890

Hatha Sunahara
22nd January 2012, 09:16 AM
The Department of Defense is too much influenced by Israel, and has therefore fallen into paranoid delusions about their military options. You can insure your safety far better by surrounding yourself with friends instead of making enemies out of everyone. Like Israel, we have no real friends in the world -- because we have become too much like Israel. The solution is obvious.


Hatha

JohnQPublic
22nd January 2012, 09:54 AM
We have defense in this country, but much of our military is oriented towards offensive actions.

Hatha Sunahara
22nd January 2012, 10:06 AM
The Department of Defense is no longer responsible for defense. It should rename itself to The Department of Imperial Security and Military Expansion. It has no enemies other than those it creates itself--like Al Qaeda. It just needs an excuse to kill people. The defense function has been handed over to the local police, who are defending the 1% against the rabble. When Americans understand this, they will see that they need to protect themselves from the insane gangsters who have guns and are claiming to 'protect' us. While they rob us of our lives, liberty and pursuit of happiness. Wake up!


Hatha

gunDriller
22nd January 2012, 10:26 AM
The Department of Defense is no longer responsible for defense. It should rename itself to The Department of Imperial Security and Military Expansion.a

Pentagon = the Talmudic Department of Ritual Human Sacrifice & Private Profiteering.

remember on 9-10-11 when Rumsfeld announced a loss of $1+ Trillion at the Pentagon ?

Glass
22nd January 2012, 02:32 PM
The defense function has been handed over to the local police, who are defending the 1% against the rabble.

I was watching Max Keiser yesterday and they made the point about changes to posse cometatus and NAAD and how the elite were no longer confident that the police can and will protect them. As they use the military a lot to achieve their ends, and it does what they tell it to, it's the obvious choice.

Hatha Sunahara
22nd January 2012, 03:23 PM
How much trust do you think the elite will be having in the military when the military (soldiers) contribute heavily to Ron Paul? It's going to boil down to whether Americans are going to follow orders to do nasty things to other Americans. Ultimately, the elite may only have outfits like Blackwater to protect them. As long as there are hired guns, and as long as the elite can pay them, they will stay in power.

I saw a video of Rumsfeld talking about the 'unknown unknowns' and it sounded like bureaucratic doublespeak to me. Like a derivative of a paranoid delusion. A euphemism for 'things we never dreamed of'. which of course is plain English. But Unknown unknowns demonstrates Rumsfeld's contempt for the outsiders. Would you give Rumsfeld money to deal with 'things we never dreamed of'? How about 'unknown unknowns'? He'd spend that money to create things you never dreamed of, like drones--a technology heavily developed by Israel.


Hatha