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JFQ 64 (1th Quarter, January 2012)

JFQ 64 (1th Quarter, January 2012) This issue focuses on the new security challenges

 Social conditions, political limitations, and other sources of moral «friction» all serve to temper war’s violence. Via such practical constraints, real wars—wars as they must actually be fought and strategized—are won.
This practical understanding of war’s moral-political qualities stemmed from Clausewitz’s deep appreciation for the role of human nature in war. Continental philosophy acted as a lens through which he understood his and others’ experiences. Enmeshed in philosophy, perhaps reluctantly, his muse was Platonic (the concept of the human psyche—pathos, logos, and ethos—from Plato’s Phaedrus serves as Clausewitz’s centerpiece, the “paradoxical” or “wonderful” trinity). Clausewitz echoes Plato’s Socrates, who was also a soldier, and one whose Peloponnesian War experience shaped his approach to politics and morality
Peter D. Fromm, Douglas A. Pryer, and Kevin R. Cutright. War Is a Moral Force: Designing a More Viable Strategy for the Information Age

СОДЕРЖАНИЕ:

Letters to the Editor

From the Chairman

Bryan B. Battaglia
Total Commitment to the Total Force

Executive Summary

An Interview with James F. Amos

The Joint Enabling Capabilities Command: A Rarity within the Conventional Force

Gregory K. James, Larry Holcomb, and Chad T. Manske
Joint Task Force Odyssey Dawn: A Model for Joint Experience, Training, and Education

David C. Arnold and Peter L. Hays
SpaceCRAF: A Civil Reserve Air Fleet for Space-based Capabilities

Peter D. Fromm, Douglas A. Pryer, and Kevin R. Cutright
War Is a Moral Force: Designing a More Viable Strategy for the Information Age

Dennis M. Murphy
The Future of Influence in Warfare

Randal M. Walsh
Security Cooperation: A New Functional Command

Ike Skelton
The Civil-Military Gap Need Not Become a Chasm

Rebecca Bill Chavez
Home • JFQ • JFQ-64 • Integrating Human Rights and Public Security Integrating Human Rights and Public Security The Challenges Posed by the Militarization of Law Enforcement

Naef Bin Ahmed Al-Saud
A Saudi Outlook for Cybersecurity Strategies Extrapolated from Western Experience

Kongdan Oh and Ralph Hassig
Military Confrontation on the Korean Peninsula

Paul Oh
Assessing Chinese Intentions for the Military Use of the Space Domain

JoAnne Wagner
"Going Out": Is China’s Skillful Use of Soft Power in Sub-Saharan Africa a Threat to U.S. Interests?

Robert C. Rubel
Slicing the Onion Differently: Seapower and the Levels of War

Aaron Angell
The High-energy Laser: Tomorrow’s Weapon to Improve Force Protection

Mark David Maxwell
Targeted Killing, the Law, and Terrorists: Feeling Safe?

David J. Greene
U.S. Strategy in Southeast Asia: Power Broker, Not Hegemon

Andrew Marble
How Are Great Leaders Made? Lessons from the Career of General John Shalikashvili (1936–2011)

David A. Anderson
Book Review: In War’s Wake

Clark Capshaw
Book Review: The Diffusion of Military Power

Alex Grynkewich
Book Review: A Transformation Gap? American Innovations and European Military Change

John T. Kuehn
Book Review: The Clausewitz Delusion: How the American Army Screwed Up the Wars in Iraq and Afghanistan (A Way Forward)

Eric Setzekorn
Book Review: Red Star Over the Pacific: China’s Rise and the Challenge to U.S. Maritime Strategy

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