Old-School Blitz With Modern Military Tactics
From today’s New York Times – Russians Melded Old-School Blitz With Modern Military Tactics by Thom Shanker.
Russia’s victorious military blitz into the former Soviet republic of Georgia brought something old and something new – but none of it was impromptu, despite appearances that a long-frozen conflict had suddenly turned hot.
The Russian military borrowed a page from classic Soviet-era doctrine: Moscow’s commanders sent an absolutely overwhelming force into Georgia. It was never going to be an even fight, and the outcome was predictable, if not preordained.
At the same time, the Russian military picked up what is new from the latest in military thinking, including American military writings about the art of war, replete with the hard-learned lessons of Iraq and Afghanistan.
So along with the old-school onslaught of infantry, armor and artillery, Russia mounted joint air and naval operations, appeared to launch simultaneous cyberattacks on Georgian government Web sites and had its best English speakers at the ready to make Moscow’s case in television appearances.
If the rapidly unfolding events caught much of the world off guard, that kind of coordination of the old and the new did not look accidental to military professionals…