ID | 140564 |
Title Proper | Making long-range planning work |
Other Title Information | the case of the US Army's 30-year strategic modernization plan |
Language | ENG |
Author | Kamaraa, Hassan M |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | The extensive timespan of evolving assumptions about future adversaries, US military engagements, and technology inherent in the US Army's 30-year modernization strategy can overwhelm the management capacity of planners, and misdirect acquisition investments. Some military scholars have argued that long-range planning is futile due to the complexities of the global security environment. So how can the US Army manage the evolving assumptions inherent in its 30-year modernization strategy to ensure it remains a superior global force? This study will answer the above question by arguing that the US Army's 30-year modernization strategy, while emulative of a similar modernization approach in the threat-based planning environment of the Cold War, is viable if supported by a method and a tool that manage investments and planning assumptions. |
`In' analytical Note | Defense and Security Analysis Vol. 31, No.3; Sep 2015 : p.260-269 |
Journal Source | Defense and Security Analysis Vol: 31 No 3 |
Key Words | Planning ; Management ; Modernization ; Risk ; Methods ; US Army ; Long Term ; Assumptions |