1 option
Assessing the value of overseas military campaigning in strategic competition / Stephen Watts, Angela O'Mahony, Bryan Rooney, Maggie Habib, Patrick Mills, Samuel Absher, Hitoshi Kumagai.
- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Watts, Stephen (Stephen Baldwin)
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Military planning--United States.
- Military planning.
- Armed Forces--Appropriations and expenditures.
- Armed Forces.
- Armed Forces--Planning.
- Strategic planning--United States.
- Strategic planning.
- Competition, International.
- Geopolitical Strategic Competition.
- Military Budgets and Defense Spending.
- Military Force Planning.
- Military Strategy.
- United States--Armed Forces--Appropriations and expenditures.
- United States.
- United States--Armed Forces--Planning.
- Local Subjects:
- Geopolitical Strategic Competition.
- Military Budgets and Defense Spending.
- Military Force Planning.
- Military Strategy.
- Place of Publication:
- RAND Corporation 2023
- Summary:
- In strategic competition against competitors that can outspend the United States (either individually or collectively), it is important to understand not only the efficacy but also the efficiency of campaigning measures. Unfortunately, neither the efficacy nor efficiency of overseas military campaigning measures beneath the threshold of armed conflict is well understood. In this report, the authors seek to address this gap and provide the foundations of a strategic evaluation and decision-support tool to inform U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) campaign planning—more specifically, to assist in choosing overseas operations, activities, and investments in a logically linked and sequenced plan in support of specific strategy-aligned objectives. The authors break down campaigns into three sets of factors: overseas campaigning instruments (or inputs), campaigning outcomes, and contextual factors that are likely to influence the effectiveness of campaigning instruments. To uncover broad patterns among interactions between the United States and its competitors and allies and partners, the authors conducted statistical analyses on whether U.S. strategic objectives have been more or less likely to be achieved when the United States employs a given overseas campaigning tool. The authors then provide rough-order-of-magnitude (ROM) cost estimates for each overseas campaigning tool. The results suggest stark trade-offs between different U.S. strategic objectives and between the likelihood of realizing U.S. objectives and the need to operate within budget constraints. These trade-offs have important policy implications.
- Contents:
- Analytic Framework
- Deterrence
- Access and Cooperation
- Stabilization and Resilience
- Cost Analysis
- Using Evaluations and Costs to Support Decisionmaking.
- Notes:
- Description from electronic resource
The Penn Libraries is committed to describing library materials using current, accurate, and responsible language. If you discover outdated or inaccurate language, please fill out this feedback form to report it and suggest alternative language.