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Military Transformation
Studies |
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The Center for Technology and National Security Policy has taken
the lead on Military Transformation. Military Transformation goes
beyond mere force modernization. It is a strategy for discovering
new sources of power and greater capabilities in the way forces
are organized, trained, equipped and employed. It is also about
transforming defense management to reduce cycle times and burdensome
processes in ways that free up a wealth of creative thinking within
DoD. It aims to replace, in some measure, bureaucratic methodologies
with entrepreneurial risk taking and venture capitalist decision
making. Military transformation is about discovering and adopting
technological advances that have sustained value for defense operations.
However, far more than being about hardware and software, transformation
is about people: transforming the way civilian and military personnel
think about warfare.
The Time Frame for defense transformation is out to the year 2020.
Capabilities available for the near term (the two year timeframe
of the Contingency Planning Guidance [CPG]) are already in the force.
Defense transformation will inform our programming decisions for
the next Future Years Defense Plan (FYDP 04-09), and on out to 2020.
However, defense transformation can and will take effect much sooner
through new ways of thinking and new ways of fighting. In that respect,
we are currently involved with the following projects:
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The Center has produced
papers on Army Transformation in cooperation with the Office
of Force Transformation. These are working draft papers that
we hope will be useful to the Welsh Panel.
Studies have included recommendations on Army transformation
and the publication of Transformation Under Fire,
which focuses on the transformation of land warfare though
the interaction of tactics, organization, technology, leadership
and culture. CTSNP is currently reviewing existing Army science
and technology (S&T) programs that are aligned with the
Army’s Future Force to identify high payoff efforts
that have the potential to be Current Force capabilities. |
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The Office of Force
Transformation and the Center have programmed three workshops
for the purpose of identifying capstone concepts that will frame
DoD's Military Transformation initiative. The first workshop
addressed how the emerging strategic environment will affect
transformation by making it multilateral and by embedding it
in a larger foreign policy effort aimed at addressing the rapidly
changing geopolitics of the 21st century. The second focused
on the new U.S. defense strategy, its new operational concepts,
and the implications posed for future force capabilities and
requirements. The third workshop addressed technology in the
context of its potential impact on transformation. The aggregate
capstone concepts of all three workshops should indicate the
most advantageous vector for effective defense transformation. |
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Transforming
America's Military, edited by Hans Binnendijk and published
in August 2002, now in its second printing. This book explores
the issues that face the U.S. military in a time of transformation:
new missions, new technologies, efforts by each of the Services,
on the part of our allies, as well as the challenges we face
after September 11. |
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Transforming
for Stabilization and Reconstruction Operations,
edited by Hans Binnendijk and Stuart Johnson and published
in 2004. This book examines the various elements of the stabilization
and reconstruction capabilities needed by the U.S. military.
It systematically addresses the range of issues that must
be resolved to transform S&R operations, including military
strategy, organization, technology, personnel, and education.
Here
is a presentation on the same subject given by Stuart Johnson
to the National War College Alumni Association National Security
Conference at Randolph AFB in April, 2005. |
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Future Naval Fleet Architecture
- Congress mandated that a study be done on Alternative Future
Naval Fleet Architectures. A team from CTNSP executed the study
under the sponsorship of the OSD Office of Force Transformation
and in co-operation with the Joint Staff, J-8. The findings
were published in a report that was circulated widely through
Congress and briefed to the senior Navy leadership to include
the Chief of Naval Operations. |
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The Center has developed
courses on Military Transformation for students at NDU and the
CAPSTONE General and Flag Officer Course. |
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The Office of Secretary of Defense/Force
Transformation established a fully funded Chair
in the Center. The Chair will permit CTNSP to do additional
teaching, curriculum development and research in the area of
Military Force Transformation. |
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Allied Military Transformation
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NATO Response
Force (NRF) – CTNSP initiated the idea of the NRF
and worked with OSD and NSC to develop the concept and
with NATO officials to implement it. In fall of 2003,
the Center worked on the simulation for the Colorado Springs
Defense Ministerial and worked with the National Security
Council to develop the agenda for the Istanbul Summit
in December 2004. |
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The Center has also proposed
a dual track approach to NATO transformation, a new Defense
Policy Guidance model for NATO, and a New Military Framework
for NATO. |
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CTNSP Case Studies |
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