Military strategy and tactics

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Methodology for winning wars, battles or engagements with the enemy.

History of warfare: Understanding the evolution of warfare and military tactics over time provides a foundation for understanding modern military strategy.
Military geography: Examining the physical environment of military campaigns or conflicts as a significant factor in strategic and tactical decision making.
Decision making: Looking at the decision-making process, from the individual to the strategic level, and understanding the critical factors that influence these decisions.
Organizational behavior: Examining the organization of military units, and analyzing their behavior and interaction to identify patterns that can affect strategic and tactical outcomes.
Leadership: The critical role of leadership skills in military strategy is essential for effective decision making and morale maintenance.
Logistics: Understanding logistical operations, including supply chain management, transportation, and equipment maintenance, is key to ensuring success in military operations.
Intelligence: The collection, analysis, and dissemination of intelligence are crucial in military operations to determine the enemy's location, plans, and capabilities.
Tactics: Analyzing specific tactics in military campaigns, including infantry and armored tactics, and the coordination of these strategies.
Strategic planning: Developing long-term plans for achieving military objectives, including resource allocation, determining objectives, and assessing risks and rewards.
Psychological warfare: Understanding how to influence an adversary's mindset or behavior through psychological warfare, including propaganda and misinformation.
Military technology: Analyzing how military technology has transformed military strategy and tactics, includes electronic warfare, drones, cyberspace, and drones.
Counterinsurgency: Examining strategies involved in countering insurgencies, including understanding the cultural, political, and social landscape of the conflict.
Guerrilla warfare: Analyzing the tactics and strategies employed by guerrilla fighters, including the use of surprise attacks, mobility, and unconventional weapons.
Operational art: Understanding how the use of force is integrated into a strategic plan for achieving military goals, including the understanding of military design, subsequent planning, and execution phases.
National security policy and decision-making: Analyzing how national security policy and specific decisions made at the highest levels of government affect military strategy and tactics.
Warfighting principles: Identifying and applying the warfighting principles for the effective use and employment of military forces.
Force structure and organization: Understanding how the structure and organization of a military force can affect decision-making and performance in warfighting.
Cybersecurity: Examining how cybersecurity fits into military strategy and tactics, including the protection of critical infrastructure and computer networks.
Training and education: Understanding the importance of appropriate training and ongoing education for military personnel, including the allocation of resources to these efforts.
International security: Analyzing the security challenges that modern military forces face within an internationally complex environment.
Blitzkrieg: A military tactic that emphasizes a rapid and overwhelming attack on enemy forces with the aim of achieving a quick victory.
Attrition Warfare: A military strategy that seeks to wear down an enemy's resources and morale over a prolonged period of time.
Guerrilla Warfare: A type of warfare used by smaller, less well-equipped forces to harass and weaken a larger, more powerful enemy through hit-and-run attacks.
Ambush: An attack on an enemy force from a concealed position, designed to quickly and decisively eliminate the enemy.
Defensive warfare: A military strategy designed to hold territory and repel enemy attacks.
Siege warfare: A tactic of surrounding and isolating an enemy fortification or stronghold, in order to cut off supplies and force a surrender.
Naval Warfare: The use of naval forces to achieve military objectives, including naval blockades, amphibious assaults, and naval support for ground forces.
Air Warfare: The use of airpower to achieve military objectives, including air raids, aerial reconnaissance, and air support for ground forces.
Cyber Warfare: The use of computer technology and the internet to achieve military objectives, including hacking, electronic warfare, and cyber espionage.
Information operations: A military strategy that uses information and communication technologies to achieve military objectives, including propaganda, psychological operations, and cyber operations.
"Derived from the Greek word strategos, the term strategy...deals with the planning and conduct of campaigns, the movement and disposition of forces, and the deception of the enemy."
"When first used during the 18th century, [strategy] was seen in its narrow sense as the 'art of the general' or 'the art of arrangement' of troops."
"The father of Western modern strategic studies, Carl von Clausewitz, defined military strategy as 'the employment of battles to gain the end of war.'"
"[B. H. Liddell Hart's] definition put less emphasis on battles, defining strategy as 'the art of distributing and applying military means to fulfill the ends of policy.'"
"Sun Tzu is often considered as the father of Eastern military strategy and greatly influenced Chinese, Japanese, Korean, and Vietnamese historical and modern war tactics."
"The Art of War by Sun Tzu grew in popularity and saw practical use in Western society as well. It continues to influence many competitive endeavors in Asia, Europe, and America including culture, politics, and business, as well as modern warfare."
"The Eastern military strategy differs from the Western by focusing more on asymmetric warfare and deception."
"Chanakya's Arthashastra has been an important strategic and political compendium in Indian and Asian history."
"Strategy refers to the employment of a nation's entire military capabilities through high-level and long-term planning, development, and procurement to guarantee security or victory."
"Operations and Tactics is the art of organizing forces on or near the battlefield to secure objectives as part of the broader military strategy."
"Derived from the Greek word strategos, the term strategy..."
"When first used during the 18th century..."
"...defined military strategy as 'the employment of battles to gain the end of war.'"
"[B. H. Liddell Hart's] definition put less emphasis on battles, defining strategy as 'the art of distributing and applying military means to fulfill the ends of policy.'"
"Sun Tzu...greatly influenced Chinese, Japanese, Korean, and Vietnamese historical and modern war tactics."
"It continues to influence many competitive endeavors in Asia, Europe, and America including culture, politics, and business, as well as modern warfare."
"The Eastern military strategy differs from the Western by focusing more on asymmetric warfare and deception."
"Chanakya's Arthashastra has been an important strategic and political compendium in Indian and Asian history."
"Strategy refers to the employment of a nation's entire military capabilities through high-level and long-term planning, development, and procurement to guarantee security or victory."
"Operations and Tactics is the art of organizing forces on or near the battlefield to secure objectives as part of the broader military strategy."