This is the second in an analytical series on joint issues. It follows the authors\u27 U.S. Department of Defense Strategic Planning: The Missing Nexus, in which they articulated the need for more formal joint strategic plans. This essay examines the effect such plans would have on joint doctrine development and illustrates the potential benefits evident in Australian defense planning. Doctrine and planning share an iterative development process. The common view is that doctrine persists over a broader time frame than planning and that the latter draws on the former for context, syntax, even format. In truth the very process of planning shapes new ways of military action. As the environment for that action changes, planners address new chal...
This article examines the strategic importance of the inner arc to the evolution of Australia’s defe...
The fortieth anniversary of the Strategic and Defence Studies Centre’s founding provided the opportu...
The nature of warfare involving coalitions is always fraught with difficulties. The competing strate...
The authors define a formal strategic plan: one that contains specific strategic objectives, offers ...
Between 1987 and 2007, the Australian, Canadian and New Zealand armed forces underwent a significant...
View the Executive SummaryMilitary leaders at many levels have used strategic planning in various wa...
The AirSea Battle concept and the Joint Operational Access Concept provide clear indications of the ...
The authors report their observations of the different ways combatant commanders-in-chief (CINCs) pr...
From the late 1940s until the early 1980s, the Australian government provided strategic guidance for...
In today’s dynamic and uncertain geo-strategic environment, it is essential that the Australian Defe...
This publication provides joint doctrine for planning and executing peace operations. 2. Purpose Thi...
Jeffrey Record examines what he believes is a half-century-old and continuing recession of large-int...
The brilliantly successful, but nonetheless hard-fought, bloody campaign in New Guinea in 1943 recei...
Abstract: Strategic planning is “hot” in many places (cities, regions, etc.) today. And, the liter- ...
iii COUNTERINSURGENCY AND OPERATIOANL ART: IS THE JOINT CAMAPIGN PLANNING MODEL ADEQUATE? by MAJ Tho...
This article examines the strategic importance of the inner arc to the evolution of Australia’s defe...
The fortieth anniversary of the Strategic and Defence Studies Centre’s founding provided the opportu...
The nature of warfare involving coalitions is always fraught with difficulties. The competing strate...
The authors define a formal strategic plan: one that contains specific strategic objectives, offers ...
Between 1987 and 2007, the Australian, Canadian and New Zealand armed forces underwent a significant...
View the Executive SummaryMilitary leaders at many levels have used strategic planning in various wa...
The AirSea Battle concept and the Joint Operational Access Concept provide clear indications of the ...
The authors report their observations of the different ways combatant commanders-in-chief (CINCs) pr...
From the late 1940s until the early 1980s, the Australian government provided strategic guidance for...
In today’s dynamic and uncertain geo-strategic environment, it is essential that the Australian Defe...
This publication provides joint doctrine for planning and executing peace operations. 2. Purpose Thi...
Jeffrey Record examines what he believes is a half-century-old and continuing recession of large-int...
The brilliantly successful, but nonetheless hard-fought, bloody campaign in New Guinea in 1943 recei...
Abstract: Strategic planning is “hot” in many places (cities, regions, etc.) today. And, the liter- ...
iii COUNTERINSURGENCY AND OPERATIOANL ART: IS THE JOINT CAMAPIGN PLANNING MODEL ADEQUATE? by MAJ Tho...
This article examines the strategic importance of the inner arc to the evolution of Australia’s defe...
The fortieth anniversary of the Strategic and Defence Studies Centre’s founding provided the opportu...
The nature of warfare involving coalitions is always fraught with difficulties. The competing strate...