DAN G. COX AND BRUCE STANLEY
We start the blog from a premise that is guided by emerging Joint Warfighting Doctrine from the U.S. Military that
Strategy is the art and science of determining a future state/conditions (ends), conveying it to your audience; establishing the procedures and authorities [(ways)]; identifying the resources to include time, forces, equipment, and money (means) necessary to reach the intended outcome (means-includes money, time, forces, equipment, etc.) while managing the associated risk. There are several types of strategy, all of which must be integrated in support of national policy” (Joint Planning, JP 5-0, 2017 Draft, p. 11).
Thus, we believe that strategic and operational planners must understand Strategic Art.
Following the Joint Warfighting doctrines definition, we agree that “Strategic Art is the ability to understand the political environment (relative to the operational area) and conceptualizing how the desired outcomes set forth in strategic guidance can be reached through the employment of military power” (Joint Planning, JP 5-0, 2017 Draft, p. 11). With this blog, we intend to take up the challenge to “understand the major international political and security challenges that impact on United States and its partner’s success, the potential options that the United States could employ as national power to attain desired ends, and visualizing how military operations can support and/or enable our national success” (Joint Planning, JP 5-0, 2017 Draft, p. 11). We believe that it is important to add to the discourse in “developing enduring, effective strategies for sustaining military efforts over the long-term, and where specific military operations are required” (Joint Planning, JP 5-0, 2017 Draft, p. 11). The emerging Joint Warfighting Doctrine challenges the strategist and military planners to develop “a range of options at the operational and strategic level.” Since the strategic environment is “dynamic and uncertain” we agree that “policy makers must retain maximum flexibility” since there is always “insufficient information, uncertainty about future resources, and developing political situations” (Joint Planning, JP 5-0, 2017 Draft, p. 11).
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