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FUTURE OPERATIONS (3) answer(s).
 
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ID:   130292


China's navy on the horizon: its first aircraft carrier is more significant for what she foreshadows than what she may show the world in the immediate future / Schuster, Carl Otis   Journal Article
Schuster, Carl Otis Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
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2
ID:   133684


Divided loyalties: the Pakistani Taliban suffers a major split / Younas, Muhammad Ahsan   Journal Article
Younas, Muhammad Ahsan Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract The top leadership of the Jihadist militant organization Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan has fractured after months of infighting. Muhammad Ahsan Younas reviews the events that caused the group to fracture ant the implications for its future operations.
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3
ID:   106582


What are you prepared to do? NATO and the strategic mismatch between ends, ways, and means in Afghanistan—and in the future / Johnson, David E   Journal Article
Johnson, David E Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
Summary/Abstract This article examines ISAF (International Security Assistance Force) operations in Afghanistan as a way to get at the strategic disconnects in ends, ways, and means that the author believes are endemic to large-scale protracted stability and COIN (counterinsurgency) operations against adversaries who do not pose palpable existential threats to the members of an alliance. The article focuses mainly on the period that followed President Barack Obama's December 2009 announcement of a civilian and military "surge" in Afghanistan through the early stages of the ISAF offensive in Marjah, which began in February 2010. The article concludes that the fundamental strategic issue is that the Allies are not willing (or able) to devote enough resources to achieve their stated objectives. No matter how much the "Ways" might be improved, the "Means" are not sufficient to attain the "Ends." Thus, what is needed is a more realistic understanding of what ISAF can accomplish in Afghanistan and what NATO might be expected to accomplish in future operations.
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