Description
After their experience in Vietnam, the US military actively pursued thinking about warfare in different ways - and reorientated training and education along those lines. It is surprising that, 50 years later, militaries seem unwilling to examine – let alone acknowledge the utility of – approaches outside manoeuvre warfare, mission command, innovation, multi-domain operations, dispersal, and the philosophy of 'our' rules-based order. Peter talks to Professor Heather Venable about why this is, whether the West can escape from the intellectual prison of its own making, and the need for Allies who are willing to think differently, and challenge the orthodoxy. Right now, to feels like the Australian Defence Force stands alone in the former category: something that US forces might need more than ever.
The competition for a commercial strategic partner for the British Army as part of the Land Training System continues. The real question that emerges is not one of cost or value but rather about what this will feel like for a corporal or a captain after a year of commercial/military partnering....
Published 07/01/24
Over the past 12 months the British Army has designed a model to train its entire force to a set standard. It will also have the credibility and capacity to train the follow-on force, whatever that is, when the time comes. The new way of training is built on three interlinked blocks – Tradewinds...
Published 05/29/24