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OPERATIONAL DOCTRINE (3) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   125971


China's 2013 defence white paper: charting diversified employment of armed forces / Chansoria, Monika   Journal Article
Chansoria, Monika Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
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2
ID:   186136


Explaining military change in China: reintroducing civilian intervention / Dossi, Simone   Journal Article
Dossi, Simone Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Since the mid-1990s, the operational doctrine of the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) has increasingly focused on jointness. For two decades, however, the PLA’s organizational structure did not adapt accordingly. A major reform was eventually passed in 2015, with the establishment of a new joint operational command system. This 20-year institutional lag is explained by the changing pattern of civilian intervention in military affairs. Even more than doctrinal change, organizational change is likely to be met with resistance from within the military. A facilitating role is then played by civilians who provide external support to pro-reform senior military officers. Yet, such external support depends on the state of civil–military relations, which determines the room for civilian intervention in the military sphere.
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3
ID:   133803


Ferdinand Foch and the scientific battle / Krause, Jonathan   Journal Article
Krause, Jonathan Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract Ferdinand Foch's thinking on trench warfare adapted as the war wore on, making an influential if under-researched contribution to tactical and operational doctrine Ferdinand Foch, Supreme Allied Commander of the armies that defeated the Central Powers, made a significant contribution to the development of the doctrine of trench warfare throughout the First World War. Yet his name is barely remembered in British popular discourses about the conflict. Jonathan Krause analyses how Foch\'s tactical and operational thinking developed in the crucial period of 1915-16.\r\n
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