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Learning from Conflict by Richard Duncan Downie β€” book cover
Military Intelligence, Military - Strategy, Insurgency & Counterinsurgency, United States - Military Policy

Learning from Conflict

by Richard Duncan Downie
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Overview

Why have militaries so often failed to learn from conflict and war? Why, for example, despite years of unsuccessful counterinsurgency experiences in Vietnam and El Salvador and repeated recommendations from official Army studies, has the U.S. Army not changed its doctrine for counterinsurgency? Writing for scholars as well as military professionals and policymakers, Downie examines the sources of doctrinal change and innovation from a theoretical perspective and derives practical and relevant policy recommendations.

Contrasting with other findings in this field, Downie provides case studies showing that neither external pressure on a military nor institutional recognition of the requirement for doctrinal change is sufficient to explain the process of doctrinal change. A military innovates when it learns, by proceeding through a learning cycle that includes achieving an organizational consensus that permits adoption of new approaches that respond to factors that make existing doctrine deficient. When that process is blocked, militaries are left with outmoded doctrinal approaches that constrain military performance and lead to defeat. This is an important study for military leaders, civilian policymakers, and scholars and researchers dealing with contemporary U.S. military issues.

About the Author, Richard Duncan Downie

RICHARD DUNCAN DOWNIE is currently Chief of the North and Central America Branch in the office of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, Strategy, Policy and Plans Directorate.

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Editorials

Booknews

Seeks to determine if the US military learned from its mistakes during the Vietnam War and other low intensity conflicts (LICs) by examining whether and how the military applied learning in subsequent conflicts. Part I offers background information on case studies and the evolution of concepts underpinning the Army's doctrine for LIC. Case studies in Parts II-IV examine how various factors influence or fail to influence change in military doctrine. For policy makers, academics, military historians, and general readers. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.

Book Details

Published
June 30, 1998
Publisher
Westport, Conn. : Praeger, 1998.
Pages
312
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780275960100

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