By: by M. V. Smith
Major M. V. Smith’s 'Ten Propositions Regarding Spacepower' is an important contribution to the spacepower literature. Major Smith’s work begins to quench the growing thirst among those seeking to understand elements contributing to spacepower. More importantly, it offers a view of what spacepower will mean for the United States in the coming decades. I believe Ten Propositions Regarding Spacepower will live up
to its aim: assisting political leaders, military professio...
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By: by Matthew M. Schmunk, Capt, USAF; Michael R. Sheets, Capt, USAF
The United States no longer enjoys a near monopoly on space effects. Every week brings news of advances in space technologies by China, Russia, India, European powers, and others. Space, as a strategic medium (and probably a future war-fighting medium), is the ultimate high ground; it is now widely shared and could be hotly contested. Ranging from satellite-based access to Internet services to China’s recent shoot down of one of its own satellites, new capabilities deriv...
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By: by David A. Moore, Colonel, USAF
I believe the author has filled a critical gap in aerial warfare literature. Most works focus on the technical or tactical aspects of our profession and medium, but stop short of discussions of the broader nature of war itself. Consideration of war in that larger sense is essential for those who seek to understand and especially apply air and space power in combat.
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By: by GARY H. MILLS, Major, USAF
The purpose of The Role of Rhetorical
Theory in Military Intelligence Analysis is to share Major Mills’s rhetorical understanding with young officers attending initial intelligence training. Throughout he infuses key elements
from the rhetorical discourse community into the discourse community that deals with training in military intelligence.
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By: by DONALD A. MACCUISH, Ed.
It is my hope that these three essays provide the reader with a better and more comprehensive understanding of the International Criminal Court,
its development, and the reasons all Americans should be concerned. For the non-American reader, I hope that these essays
provide a well-articulated explanation of our concerns about the International Criminal Court.
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By: by MAJOR SEAN M. JUDGE
Accounts of seizing the tactical or operational initiative abound. At the strategic level of war, however, initiative receives only transitory mention. Authors and military professionals often assume a common understanding of strategic initiative, including which combatant has it and why. There is neither a clear definition of the concept, nor any significant analysis of the elements that contribute to it. This thesis contributes to the elimination of that gap by answeri...
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By: by Kristal L. M. Alfonso
This paper reviews four case studies that demonstrate the variety of ways women have participated in modern armed conflict and explores whether current US laws and policies excluding women from combat remain valid or need to be amended. Each case study examines three principal facets of female participation in combat: context, motivations and inspirations, and the actual contributions made by these women in combat operations.
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By: by Air University Press
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By: by David F. Bird Jr., Lieutenant Colonel, USAF
The Air Force has challenged leaders to integrate and use quality principles as a way to improve operations throughout the service. In this study Lt Col David F. Bird, USAF, reminds us that these quality principles apply to emergency response forces, both before and during a crisis. He proposes that senior
leaders view quality concepts and principles as a way of creating an environment to spark the highest performance by their subordinates and not as giving up authority or control.
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By: by Carla D. Bass
In this compelling study, Lt Col Carla D. Bass argues that the American military, underestimating vulnerabilities of the US information infrastructure, has based its strategic policy not on a firm foundation, but rather has built castles on sand. Lieutenant Colonel Bass believes that the United States
cannot simply postulate doctrine and tactics which rely so extensively on information and information technology without comparable attention to information and informatio...
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By: by Karen U. Kwiatkowski
Lt Col Karen U. Kwiatkowski’s Expeditionary Air Operations in Africa: Challenges and Solutions details air operations challenges in Africa. She discusses how the USAF currently meets
or avoids these challenges. She contends that Africa is like the “western frontier” of America’s history—undeveloped, brimming with opportunity as well as danger, and that it is a place where standard assumptions often do not apply. Africa has not been, and is not today, a US geostrategic i...
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By: by G. Scott Gorman
Endgame in the Pacific examines the challenges encountered by XX and XXI Bomber Commands in employing the B-29
against Japan, first from India and China, later from the Marianas. In turn, it examines the adaptations required to meet
those challenges.
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By: by Col Dennis M. Drew, USAF, Retired
The essays and speeches in this volume are some of Dennis Drew's best and most important. They reflect the struggle over the past 30 years to relate classical military theory to modern airpower, the difficulties of dealing with the new realities of the post–Cold
War era, the struggle to understand the true nature of airpower and put it into perspective, and finally the importance of educating
Airmen and raising their thinking above the tactical level.
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By: by Laura A. H. DiSilverio
Analysis of the percentage of men and women by commissioned years of service in the Air Force indicates that women separate prior
to retirement more frequently than men. Having determined that women separate from the Air Force prior to retirement eligibility more often than men, Lt Col Laura DiSilverio
wanted to find out why. The first chapter demonstrates why the Air Force needs women. It makes the demographic case and presents research results showing the value of di...
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By: by Lt Col Anthony J. Mastalir, USAF
Lt Col Anthony Mastalir has done policy makers a welcome service by exploring the enigma wrapped in a conundrum which is Chinese space policy, focusing on the Chinese kinetic energy antisatellite (KE-ASAT) test of January 2007. That test ended a de facto moratorium on KE-ASAT tests which the United States and Russia had observed for over two decades. It also announced the arrival of a new player in strategic space, forcing a reevaluation of US capabilities in space as we...
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By: by Lt Col Laura L. Lenderman, USAF
Colonel Lenderman explores the increase in the number and influence of mobility generals in the late twentieth century and looks toward the future, presenting possible reasons why these generals will continue to rise or why their opportunities may be limited. She concludes by discussing the significance of this study as it pertains to the Air Force’s development and the nation’s security.
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By: by Lt. Gen. Lloyd R. “Dick” Leavitt, USAF, Retired
The years from 1947 through the beginning of the twenty first century witnessed the USAF steadily progress until it became the preeminent air force in the world. With less than 400,000 active duty personnel, the USAF has capabilities and tasks today that were not imaginable six decades ago. The World War II legacy from the Army Air Forces, epitomized in the familiar Air Force song lyrics “off we go into the wild blue yonder, climbing high into the sky!” is not forgotten....
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By: by Daniel R. Mortensen, ed.
It was inevitable that the airman’s perspective regarding the employment of airpower in an operational theater would surface in North Africa, the first major American offensive of World War II. The North Africa experience provided a model for the organization and employment of tactical airpower in subsequent campaigns in Europe, Korea, Vietnam, and the Gulf War. In each of these campaigns, planners have continued to refine, expand, and improve the effectiveness of tactic...
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By: by Brian W. Mclean
The author's contention is that training for night air operations, particularly with our sister services, is in its infancy. Using his personal
experience he sets out to recommend better uses of the training facilities of all the services to improve the situation . After examining the history of joint operations and night air operations, presenting a hypothetical
joint night scenario to show the tremendous challenges of such operations, and describing the current statu...
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By: by Mark D. Mandeles
The B-52 and Jet Propulsion: A Case Study in Organizational Innovation is a coherent and nonpolemical discussion of the revolution in military affairs, a hot topic in the national security arena. Mark Mandeles examines an interesting topic, how can the military better understand, manage, and evaluate technological development programs. We see Murphy’s Law (anything that can go wrong, will go wrong) in operation. No matter how carefully the military designs, plans, and pr...
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