Doctrine of Eternal Recurrence--The U.S. Military and Counterinsurgency Doctrine, 1960-1970 and 2003-2006
RAND Counterinsurgency Study--Paper 6
Download Url(s)
https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.7249/OP200OSDAuthor(s)
Long, Austin
Language
EnglishAbstract
By comparing modern counterinsurgency doctrine and operations to those of 1960s, this paper tests and ultimately disproves the assumption that doctrine as written and operations as conducted are tightly linked. Ingrained organizational concepts and beliefs have a much greater influence on operations than written doctrine, and altering these beliefs will require the U.S. military to reorient itself mentally as well as physically.
Keywords
Political Science; Management & Organizational BehaviorDOI
10.7249/OP200OSDISBN
9780833045355, 9780833044709Publisher
RAND CorporationPublication date and place
2008Classification
Personnel and human resources management
Warfare and defence
Political control and freedoms