Small Wars Journal

Journal

Journal Articles are typically longer works with more more analysis than the news and short commentary in the SWJ Blog.

We accept contributed content from serious voices across the small wars community, then publish it here as quickly as we can, per our Editorial Policy, to help fuel timely, thoughtful, and unvarnished discussion of the diverse and complex issues inherent in small wars.

by Paul O. Kwon | Mon, 03/07/2016 - 4:52pm | 1 comment

“Mad Scientist” series - The need for an Integrated Global Health Surveillance and Response Program through a complex web of surveillance, education, and interactive coordination.

by Carole N. House | Mon, 03/07/2016 - 1:10am | 0 comments

Unconventional warfare and political warfare offer valuable strategic options beyond traditional military means to achieve national policy objectives.

by Robert Murphy | Sun, 03/06/2016 - 11:10am | 56 comments

“Paper Tiger (noun): one that is outwardly powerful or dangerous but inwardly weak or ineffectual” -Merriam-Webster.com

by David Rodman | Sat, 03/05/2016 - 1:30am | 0 comments

Skilled armies sometimes choose to emphasize attrition over maneuver warfare because circumstances warrant such decisions.

by Mark A. Carter | Fri, 03/04/2016 - 6:58am | 0 comments

This paper identifies challenges faced by Geographic Combatant Commanders when operating as part of a multinational force or an interagency team.

by Christopher Paul | Thu, 03/03/2016 - 5:40pm | 7 comments

What might really be interesting but hidden within the various conceptions of gray zone conflict, ambiguous warfare, political warfare, and their ilk.

by Philip Lere | Thu, 03/03/2016 - 4:43pm | 2 comments

The US-led Coalition adjusted its logistics strategy, setting out to create an Afghan system based on the model of “pull” sustainment. The Afghans  were, and are, not ready.

by Robert Bunker | Wed, 03/02/2016 - 10:13pm | 0 comments

Bloodbath on the beaches: The Mexican drug gangs riding on JET SKIS to blast victims ‘James Bond-style’.

by Colin Tansey, by Mark Read, by Amy Krakowka Richmond, by Richard Wolfel | Wed, 03/02/2016 - 2:35pm | 0 comments

“Mad Scientist” series - As the US Army considers the challenges of operating in dense urban areas, leadership requires a basic understanding of the operating environment.

by Alfred C. Crane, by Richard Peeke | Fri, 02/26/2016 - 8:29am | 0 comments

“Mad Scientist” series - It may prove beneficial to leverage the IOT in order to provide our Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen and Marines the decisive advantage needed to fight and win.

by Shade T. Shutters, by Wes Herche, by Erin King | Fri, 02/26/2016 - 4:21am | 0 comments

“Mad Scientist” series - It is critical that we understand complex systems.  This requires embracing a complex adaptive systems framework focused on urban networks.

by Doyle Quiggle | Thu, 02/25/2016 - 5:42pm | 1 comment

Today’s non-warfighters have largely forgotten that Western civilization’s art and style of thinking was invented by a grunt, a decorated hero, a veteran of three wars—Socrates.

by Dylan Farley | Wed, 02/24/2016 - 3:29pm | 0 comments

Urban areas present diverse challenges and one issue is communications. Communications that could be easy in other environments become remarkably more challenging in urban terrain.

by Colin D. Wood, by Dawn A. Morrison | Tue, 02/23/2016 - 3:58pm | 0 comments

"Mad Scientist" series - Megacities and dense urban environments are firmly on the horizon as likely and potential environments for future warfare and humanitarian engagements.

by Frank Prautzsch | Mon, 02/22/2016 - 4:54pm | 0 comments

The latest in the “Mad Scientist” series - By 2050, urbanization will arguably be the most consequential event in the history of mankind.

by Ron Poropatich, by Jan Berkow | Fri, 02/19/2016 - 2:11am | 0 comments

This "Mad Scientist" essay posits that Tactical Combat Casualty Care capabilities must undergo disruptive changes that enable the development of an “intelligent” TCCC platform.

by Geoffrey Demarest | Thu, 02/18/2016 - 1:18am | 0 comments

This "Mad Scientist" essay proposes adoption of a specific planning framework for urban operations.

 

by Russell W. Glenn | Wed, 02/17/2016 - 7:15am | 0 comments

Megacities are sure to challenge every member of a coalition. How these urban areas might do so in the intelligence realm in the near future is the primary focus of this offering.

by Jay Gilhooly | Tue, 02/16/2016 - 1:20am | 0 comments

To better understand the challenges of securing the border, this article analyzes the Border States environment, the human element, and then look towards the future.

by Brian Lampert | Mon, 02/15/2016 - 10:29am | 0 comments

Risky gambles or sure bets? Understanding how and why Putin makes decisions regarding the use of Russian power abroad continues to challenge outside observers.

by Stefano Bonino | Sun, 02/14/2016 - 9:41am | 0 comments

Intolerant individuals advancing an extremist Islamist agenda entered the British landscape long before the global rise of al-Qaeda and, later, the Islamic State.

by Kevin Duffy | Sun, 02/14/2016 - 1:10am | 0 comments

The defense establishment must embrace the energy and ideas already being produced and provide a way for them to have real impact - an innovation program that seeks true offsets.

by Dave Dilegge | Sat, 02/13/2016 - 5:06am | 1 comment

I first posted this short piece at the Urban Operations Journal on 28 February 2003 and reposted it here at SWJ on 17 December 2007. Here are the considerations, again.

by Jon Watkins, by Chuck Campbell | Fri, 02/12/2016 - 6:06pm | 0 comments

The latest in the TRADOC G-2 / SWJ Mad Scientist call for papers series.

by Charles Barham | Thu, 02/11/2016 - 3:41pm | 12 comments

This paper seeks to identify lessons from the Afghanistan “COIN Development” experience at the strategic level.

by Andrew Kenealy | Thu, 02/11/2016 - 2:37pm | 0 comments

How do we measure the on-the-ground costs of taking civilian lives?

by Patrick Duggan | Wed, 02/10/2016 - 1:39pm | 1 comment

Every SOF practitioner will be required to understand the basics of cyberspace, computers, and coding because they’ll need those skills to conduct cyber special operations.

by Mbaye Bashir Lo | Wed, 02/10/2016 - 10:02am | 0 comments

This is a world of closely-knit communities. It signals the end of closed border politics, the irrelevance of the politics of containment and the risks of double-standard politics.

by SWJ Editors | Tue, 02/09/2016 - 6:50pm | 0 comments

Continue on for a TRADOC G-2 / Small Wars Journal "Mad Scientist" call for papers update.

by Darryl Ward | Tue, 02/09/2016 - 5:47am | 0 comments

In order to predict future impacts of megacities to the US Army, the global drivers and trends leading to megacity development must be identified.

by Gregory D. Miller | Mon, 02/08/2016 - 11:39am | 47 comments

We can become so preoccupied with how to win over the population we fail to ask when attempting to do so is even appropriate.

by Ralph Hernandez, by Chevy Cook, by Jim Perkins | Sun, 02/07/2016 - 7:36pm | 0 comments

On the surface, facilitating mentoring seems very simple, but even establishing a common definition is a significant challenge.

by John Commerford | Sun, 02/07/2016 - 7:11am | 1 comment

In dispute is how to make attack pilots trained in and flying in an aircraft designed for an attack mission into aerial scouts.

by Darren E. Tromblay | Sat, 02/06/2016 - 4:13pm | 8 comments

While it contends with the Islamic State and al-Qaida an insurgency intent on challenging the sovereignty of the U.S. government is already here.

by Dan Bennett, by Frederick Waage, by Matthew Hutchison | Fri, 02/05/2016 - 8:32pm | 0 comments

The Army must develop a holistic solution to Army-wide cyber resiliency and hardening of electronic systems to address our current cyber capability gap.

by Gary R. Gilbert, by Nathan Fisher | Thu, 02/04/2016 - 1:48pm | 0 comments

The growing planned use of UMS and robotics on the future battlefield affords both great opportunities and challenges to far future medical operations.

by Jérôme Diaz | Thu, 02/04/2016 - 12:26pm | 0 comments

Interview with Kate Clark of the Afghanistan Analysts Network.

by Gary Anderson | Wed, 02/03/2016 - 6:44pm | 0 comments

If we aren’t willing to use American infantry against ISIS, perhaps we might consider using robots.

by Octavian Manea | Tue, 02/02/2016 - 8:33pm | 35 comments

SWJ discussion with Alexander Lanoszka, Postdoctoral Fellow at the Dickey Center for International Understanding, Dartmouth College.

by Michael Chandler | Sun, 01/31/2016 - 3:14am | 8 comments

Kilcullen has six maxims to manage company-level COIN operations, and for me the most interesting one of the six is “travel light, and harden your combat service support.”

by Joshua Tromp | Thu, 01/28/2016 - 4:30am | 1 comment

This research examines the cyber battle space, why it poses a significant threat, and how attribution difficulties can create significant issues for deterrence of cyber-attacks.

by Charles J. Dunlap, Jr. | Wed, 01/27/2016 - 1:21pm | 8 comments

Lawyers like to say that “bad facts make bad law” – and that could be at play here.

by Virginia Byers | Wed, 01/27/2016 - 1:30am | 1 comment

America has been ignoring the overall threat that has been attacking her people since the 1979 Iranian Revolution.

by W. R. Baker | Tue, 01/26/2016 - 7:27pm | 0 comments

Like the Battle of the Bulge, the 1972 Easter Offensive has often been referred to as an intelligence failure because it caught the U.S. and S. Vietnam completely by surprise.

by Gregory D. Foster | Tue, 01/26/2016 - 8:56am | 0 comments

Statecraft stands apart as a more elevated undertaking than politics... statecraft is fundamentally a strategic enterprise, while strategy in turn is... an ethical enterprise.

by Jan Schwarzenberg | Mon, 01/25/2016 - 10:15pm | 12 comments

Are American terrorists considered combatants if not in an active combat zone engaging U.S. forces on the ground and should they be accorded additional consideration before being targeted?

by Alex Reese | Sun, 01/24/2016 - 6:33pm | 3 comments

This research paper examines four cells of individuals, both rooted in society and of a high socio-economic status, whose members have radicalized within North America.

by Rory O’Connor | Wed, 01/20/2016 - 10:23am | 35 comments

The true goal of Special Forces physical training should reflect that which was sought by the OSS—complete confidence to handle uncertainty.

by James Emery | Tue, 01/19/2016 - 4:58pm | 2 comments

Egos and agendas are destroying the prospect for a powerful alliance against ISIS.

by Rodney D. Harris, by Jeffrey D. Morris | Tue, 01/19/2016 - 12:53am | 1 comment

People have always given our Nation and our Army the competitive advantage. In the Cyber Domain, the people continue to be the central factor to our success.