Book Review THE STRATEGIC CORPORAL REVISITED: CHALLENGES FACING COMBATANTS IN 21ST-CENTURY WARFARE. David Lovell and Deane-Peter Baker (eds)

Similar documents
To be prepared for war is one of the most effectual means of preserving peace.

The 19th edition of the Army s capstone operational doctrine

CHIEF OF AIR FORCE COMMANDER S INTENT. Our Air Force Potent, Competent, Effective and Essential

As our Army enters this period of transition underscored by an

DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY Headquarters United States Marine Corps Washington, D.C October 1996 FOREWORD

38 th Chief of Staff, U.S. Army

Scott Lassan The Importance of Civil-Military Cooperation in Stability Operations By Scott Lassan

Capability Solutions for Joint, Multinational, and Coalition Operations

It is now commonplace to hear or read about the urgent need for fresh thinking

GAO Report on Security Force Assistance

Training and Evaluation Outline Report

Department of Defense DIRECTIVE

NATO RULES OF ENGAGEMENT AND USE OF FORCE. Lt Col Brian Bengs, USAF Legal Advisor NATO School

Risk Management Fundamentals

Information Operations

How Everything Became War and the Military Became Everything: Tales from the Pentagon Rosa Brooks New York: Simon & Schuster, 2016, 448 pp.

Revolution in Army Doctrine: The 2008 Field Manual 3-0, Operations

NURS6031 Leadership and Collaborative Practice

The New Roles of the Armed Forces, and Its Desirable Disposition

THE MILITARY STRATEGY OF THE REPUBLIC OF LITHUANIA

THE NAVY PROFESSION. U.S. Naval War College 4 April

Methodology The assessment portion of the Index of U.S.

Defense Technical Information Center Compilation Part Notice

Statement by. Brigadier General Otis G. Mannon (USAF) Deputy Director, Special Operations, J-3. Joint Staff. Before the 109 th Congress

IMPLEMENTATION POSSIBILITIES OF THE MILITARY OBSERVER TRAINING TO THE TRAINING SYSTEM FOR PEACETIME MILITARY ENGAGEMENT AND PEACE SUPPORT OPERATIONS

Student Guide: Introduction to Army Foreign Disclosure and Contact Officers

PART III NATO S CIVILIAN AND MILITARY STRUCTURES CHAPTER 12

Setting Foreign and Military Policy

GAO WARFIGHTER SUPPORT. DOD Needs to Improve Its Planning for Using Contractors to Support Future Military Operations

... from the air, land, and sea and in every clime and place!

Military to Civilian Conversion: Where Effectiveness Meets Efficiency

Challenges of a New Capability-Based Defense Strategy: Transforming US Strategic Forces. J.D. Crouch II March 5, 2003

The best days in this job are when I have the privilege of visiting our Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen,

THINKING DIFFERENTLY ABOUT NETWORK RESILIENCE

NATO UNCLASSIFIED. 6 January 2016 MC 0472/1 (Final)

In Exporting Security, Derek Reveron provides

The Future of US Ground Forces: Some Thoughts to Consider

Modern Leaders: Evolution of today s NCO Corps

How Can the Army Improve Rapid-Reaction Capability?

Baptist Health Nurse Leader Competency Model

DoD CBRN Defense Doctrine, Training, Leadership, and Education (DTL&E) Strategic Plan

Ground Robotics Update Presented at the Congressional Robotics Caucus Kick-Off Lunch

Training and Evaluation Outline Report

GAO MILITARY OPERATIONS

GPhC response to the Rebalancing Medicines Legislation and Pharmacy Regulation: draft Orders under section 60 of the Health Act 1999 consultation

SUSTAIN THE MISSION. SECURE THE FUTURE. STRATEGY FOR THE ENVIRONMENT

Coalition Command and Control: Peace Operations

LPA Submission to National Opera Review Discussion Paper

RECRUIT SUSTAINMENT PROGRAM SOLDIER TRAINING READINESS MODULES Leadership Overview 9 July 2012

The Necessity of Human Intelligence in Modern Warfare Bruce Scott Bollinger United States Army Sergeants Major Academy Class # 35 SGM Foreman 31 July

Leaders to Serve the Nation

Navy Medicine. Commander s Guidance

Training and Evaluation Outline Report

Fighter/ Attack Inventory

REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND THE COUNCIL. Report on the interim evaluation of the «Daphne III Programme »

CIMIC MESSENGER. Updating the CIMIC Library. Foreword. Inside this Issue. March 2016

War in the 21st century is a volatile, uncertain, complex,

NATO MEASURES ON ISSUES RELATING TO THE LINKAGE BETWEEN THE FIGHT AGAINST TERRORISM AND THE PROLIFERATION OF WEAPONS OF MASS DESTRUCTION

Intelligence Preparation of the Battlefield Cpt.instr. Ovidiu SIMULEAC

United States Special Operations Command WPSC ROLE OF USSOCOM i

SACT s remarks to UN ambassadors and military advisors from NATO countries. New York City, 18 Apr 2018

Professionalism and Leader Development

LESSON ONE FUNDAMENTALS OF MILITARY OPERATIONS OTHER THAN WAR. MQS Manual Tasks: OVERVIEW

Engineer Doctrine. Update

Released under the Official Information Act 1982

Small Wars: Their Principles and Practice

MULTINATIONAL LOGISTICS SUPPORT AND NATO PLANNING PROCESS

Culture / Climate. 2-4 Mission command fosters a culture of trust,

J. L. Jones General, U.S. Marine Corps Commandant of the Marine Corps

Response to government consultation ( prompting professionalism, reforming regulation ) on development of regulation of healthcare professionals in

Marine Corps Public Affairs

TAMESIDE & GLOSSOP SYSTEM WIDE SELF CARE PROGRAMME

The Post-Afghanistan IED Threat Assessment: Executive Summary

The State Defence Concept Executive Summary

SA ARMY SEMINAR 21. The Revision of the South African Defence Review and International Trends in Force Design: Implications for the SA Army

HUMAN RESOURCES ADVANCED / SENIOR LEADERS COURSE 42A

Department of Defense DIRECTIVE

Foreign Policy and Homeland Security

POLICIES CONCERNING THE NAVAL POSTGRADUATE SCHOOL

UNCLASSIFIED FY 2016 OCO. FY 2016 Base

A Call to the Future

USCYBERCOM 2018 Cyberspace Strategy Symposium Proceedings

February 1, The analysis depends critically on three key factors:

9. Guidance to the NATO Military Authorities from the Defence Planning Committee 1967

MCWP Electronic Warfare. U.S. Marine Corps PCN

Training and Evaluation Outline Report

America s Airmen are amazing. Even after more than two decades of nonstop. A Call to the Future. The New Air Force Strategic Framework

Department of Defense DIRECTIVE. SUBJECT: Electronic Warfare (EW) and Command and Control Warfare (C2W) Countermeasures

Adapting the Fitness Report: Evolving an intangible quality into a tangible evaluation to

THE 2008 VERSION of Field Manual (FM) 3-0 initiated a comprehensive

Office of the Coordinator for Reconstruction and Stabilization

Towards Quality Care for Patients. National Core Standards for Health Establishments in South Africa Abridged version

Capital Offence June www orld.com.cbrnew

TRAINING FOR FULL SPECTRUM OPERATIONS

INFORMATION PAPER SUBJECT:

Training and Evaluation Outline Report

Sustaining the Transformation

Policy Defence and National Security. Policy highlights. Protecting our interests

Guideline: Expanded practice for Registered Nurses

150-MC-0002 Validate the Intelligence Warfighting Function Staff (Battalion through Corps) Status: Approved

Transcription:

149 Book Review THE STRATEGIC CORPORAL REVISITED: CHALLENGES FACING COMBATANTS IN 21ST-CENTURY WARFARE David Lovell and Deane-Peter Baker (eds) Evert Jordaan Department of Military Strategy Stellenbosch University Cape Town: UCT Press 2017, 210 pages ISBN: 9781775822202 Paperback. The Strategic Corporal Revisited: Challenges Facing Combatants in 21 st -Century Warfare is an edited book that explores the complexity of future warfare from an Australian military perspective. The concept of the strategic corporal as explained by former United States Marine Corps Commandant, Charles Krulak, in his seminal article The Strategic Corporal: Leadership in the Three Block War, 1 is used to assess and evaluate a wide variety of important current and future challenges for military leaders. The concept of the strategic corporal refers to low-level military leaders who have to make critical tactical decisions in complex situations that could affect the operational and strategic levels. It also refers to the high demands that military leadership places on soldiers. Three Block War refers to different contingencies in which soldiers may have to Scientia Militaria, South African Journal of Military Studies, Vol 45, No. 2, 2017, pp. 149 154. doi : 10.5787/45-2-1215 make decisions while facing challenges or threats across the spectrum of conflict (humanitarian assistance, peacekeeping and warfighting) in the same vicinity (three adjacent city blocks), within a couple of 1 Krulak, CC The Strategic Corporal: Leadership in the Three Block War (1999) 83 (1) Marine Corps Gazette at 18 22.

150 hours. The book focusses on the increasing complexity of the roles and responsibilities of soldiers in demanding conflict situations involving three block war. It points out that soldiers face higher expectations of technical proficiency in the information era to operate sophisticated equipment within interconnected communications and intelligence systems. At the same time, it explains that soldiers are expected to make critical decisions in situations beyond their traditional scope of responsibility and training, especially in complex emergencies, where so-called soft science skills such as language, media liaison, mediation and legal skills become increasingly important. The importance of being able to operate within the context of unfamiliar cultures is highlighted. The book explains the strategic risk if soldiers who control increasingly destructive equipment, make mistakes in applying military force. The central theme of the book is that the burdens placed on future military leaders will increase, while the future environments within which they will operate will become increasingly complex. The book maps out the various demands and challenges for soldiers, civilians and private contractors within the strategic corporal and three block war context. The preparation of future military leaders is presented as a continuous professional development process that must be supported by overlapping systems within military organisations, including the bureaucracy and leadership systems. The book highlights the importance of education, training and development for soldiers and especially junior leaders, including non-commissioned officers (NCOs). It emphasises the importance of having an overarching leadership system that inculcates the required values and ethics to which an organisation aspires. The book includes important domains, such as cyber warfare, and considers the influence of advanced technology on future military leaders in complex operations. The book reflects on recent cases in terms of the confines of the Western way of using military forces and ethical questions around it. Besides looking at cyber warfare, new technological developments and future challenges, the book emphasises the negative influence of bureaucratic cultures in armed forces that stifle the concept of the strategic corporal. It covers aspects that suppress the development of dynamic leaders who have to make tough decisions either during missions or in the best interest of a military organisation. The book provides a useful perspective on the overall military organisational requirements to enable the concept of the strategic corporal within the context of Krulak s three block war. While the importance of bureaucratic visions for what future leaders

151 should be able to do is recognised, although not overstated, the setting of realistic and achievable organisational goals is emphasised. The underdevelopment of the concept of strategic corporal is highlighted, as well as the paying of lip service to this concept and others, such as Auftragstaktik. A clear strong point of the book is that it does not present the concept of the strategic corporal as a silver bullet for overall strategic success and it also does not assume that the military can provide all the solutions to armed conflicts or humanitarian crises. The importance of sound strategic decisionmaking is properly emphasised. In this sense, the book highlights that strategic blunders may still occur, even if the concept of strategic corporal is applied. The book also presents warfare and its methods as a non-static and constantly changing phenomenon of action and reaction. The book discusses the future challenges and constraints that soldiers face in three block war situations in significant breadth. Matters discussed are, for instance, the need to operate autonomously, the deployment of fewer soldiers, the transfer of more specialised equipment to normal infantrymen, the importance of force protection, sensitivity to casualties and the well-being of soldiers. The book also considers private contractors, who are part of the strategic landscape. The strategic significance and utility of private contractors, as well as the challenges regarding their use are compared with those of regular troops. The book points out how similar the utility of highly trained soldiers and contractors are, especially in terms of special operations skills. The overall themes of the chapters of the book can be divided into four parts. The first part (Chapters 1 to 3) pays attention to the contemporary meaning and implementation of the concept of the strategic corporal and the obstacles in this regard. The second part (Chapters 4 and 5) applies the concept of strategic corporal to military contractors and civilians. The third component (Chapters 6 to 8) deals with the challenges that soldiers face in so-called unconventional roles and specifically constabulary tasks, peacekeeping, counterinsurgency and cyber warfare. The last part contains a stand-alone case study on Singapore Armed Forces in Afghanistan, and a concluding chapter. Important features of each chapter are mentioned next. The first chapter, written by Lovell, provides a background on Krulak and the influence of his work. It also serves as an introduction to the book and explains that the strategic corporal is used as a metaphor or lens to study the high demands and challenges that junior military leaders face as warfare changes in asymmetric ways. The second chapter by Jans focusses the attention on the effect that organisational behaviour (at all levels in a military) has on the overall culture

152 of leadership. Jans argues that a style of stewardship and shared leadership should be facilitated by leaders to harness both the individual and collective expertise within a group to operate more effectively, instead of just relying on seniority and rank. This chapter points out the barriers to shared leadership within armed forces. The third chapter is an insightful chapter by Adams, with short cases/examples that explain how armed forces can sometimes become complacent and mediocre, conceal the truth, and avoid difficult and unpopular decisions by hiding behind bureaucracy and red tape. The chapter explains this as a major impediment to the development of military capability, as well as the concept of strategic corporal and mission command. It emphasises that military leaders are often not allowed to make decisions based on their values, ethics and military principles pertaining to effectiveness. The tendency to reward compliant behaviour instead of sound leadership is an important issue raised in this chapter, which also covers the tension between the so-called corporate (headquartered) and field armies. The chapter by Baker and Pfotenhauer, pays attention to the unexpected prominence of private contractors in the new millennium and explores the effect of their use in armed conflict in conjunction with regular troops. It does this by using four themes from Krulak s article: the fluidity and complexity of the tactical environment; the influence of low tactical decisions on strategic success; the outcome of distributed operations and difficulty to provide mutual support in various forms, including command and control; and the omnipresent media. The chapter considers the inherent tensions and blurred lines between being a contractor and being a professional soldier. The campaigns in Afghanistan and Iraq (as part of the War on Terror ) are used as backdrops for the discussion. The fifth chapter, by Ryan, emphasises the important role of civilians (in armed conflict) in order to guide and pursue political and strategic success by means of diplomacy in peace agreements, utilising strategic windows of opportunity, as well as providing expert capacity for operations. The requirement for civilians that could match the level of expertise of their military counterparts is an important point of this chapter. In Chapter 6, Wills pays attention to how unprepared NCOs often are for low-intensity operations and peacekeeping, especially in terms of training, experience and education. This chapter also highlights that soldiers are often involved in human rights violations and that militaries should provide the necessary training, awareness and systems of reporting and accountability. Chapter 7 by Buchan deals with the ascendance of cyber warfare and the implications of it, which includes the prominent use of civilian contractors. The chapter then raises legal questions on when civilians or civilian contractors can be defined as direct participants in hostilities in cyber warfare and the implications this has for armed

153 conflict and cyber counter-attacks. Chapter 8, by Lovell, addresses the change in the characteristics of warfare and the reality of unexpected and unconventional tasks that militaries will face in future conflict, including constabulary roles, responding to disasters and counterinsurgency. It argues that technological advances often create the misimpression that warfare no longer involves inputs from human power or fatalities. It explains how soldiers should be educated from a career-path perspective. This is one of the most important chapters in the book. The chapter by Chan, is a case study on the Singapore Armed Forces. Chan considers their relatively successful role in Afghanistan from 2007 to 2013, as part of the United Nations-sanctioned and North Atlantic Treaty Organisationled International Security Assistance Force (ISAF). This case study indicates that the concept of strategic corporal does not have to be pursued consciously for militaries to achieve success in operations. The epilogue by Moffit provides an important and brave criticism and reality check on elitism within military hierarchies from an NCO perspective. He does this by highlighting that strategic failures are often blamed on junior leaders and their poor decision-making and judgment, while strategic successes are claimed by senior officers. Moreover, it is argued that lower ranks receive harsh punishments for mistakes, while senior officers often walk away scot-free from their failures, without being held accountable. It is argued that the solution to eradicating elitism in armed forces is to build adaptive and meritocratic militaries by unlocking the full potential of human capital, as opposed to investing predominantly in expensive military hardware. It is argued that free self-determined and blended educational opportunities should be provided for all soldiers throughout their careers, as a strategic priority. This will fundamentally improve preparedness for unforeseen complex military contingencies and provide career and social mobility within and beyond military service. The book has three shortcomings. Firstly, although this book is not about military sociology, it says little about the current nature of the military profession and where it is headed. The state of the military profession within a particular country provides important characteristics about the military that should inform current and future measures of reform in armed forces. Secondly, while the book refers to the importance of education and certain subjects, it says little about the current and future trends and thinking on educating future leaders, especially since education is a key element for preparation for an uncertain future. Thirdly, the book does not discuss the training of soldiers for future contingencies at individual, team or unit levels. Consequently, a question that is left unanswered is what the required mix between education, training and development of soldiers should be as part of their career path.

154 To conclude, the context within which the strategic corporal is used in this book relates predominantly to wars of choice and unconventional operations. The book emphasises that militaries have to adapt, and this has to take place at various levels, including organisational, unit and individual level. At individual level, education is emphasised as a critical success factor to enhance the adaptability of soldiers. Although the book is written largely from an Australian armed forces perspective, it is applicable to other democracies and small powers. This book is strongly recommended for professional soldiers of all ranks and can be a useful reader for leadership and military courses.