An MV-22B Osprey taxis to the runway on MorĂ³n Air Base, Spain, as it deploys to West Africa in support of Operation United Assistance Oct. 8 2014. The aircraft is assigned to Special Purpose Marine Air-Ground Task Force-Crisis Response-Africa. U.S. Marine Corps photo by 1st Lt. Gerard R. Farao
The Great Revamp: 11 Trends Shaping Future Conflict -- Frank Hoffman and Pat Garrett, War On The Rocks
Our thinking about future wars is often held hostage by the tension between continuity and change. We tend to embrace the known past and continuity with it, sometimes too tightly. But thinking about future wars and preparing the Joint Force for success beyond today’s battles has to be based on more than extrapolating from history or clinging to the immutable realities of war. This is not a task for the faint of heart, as Colin Gray notes, “the further away from today one peers and tries to predict, the foggier the course of future events becomes.” Certainly we can benefit from deep immersion in history and its lessons, but we also must peek around the bend into the future. Since warfare often presents changes that are more than cosmetic, per Clausewitz, Joint Force developers must continuously balance their search for relevant lessons from the past while scanning for indicators of trends that will yield change in the future.
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My Comment: These are general trends .... but still a good summary.
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