Search
Using the filters to the left, click your selection, it will become bold and filter the results, click it again to remove that filter.
Abstract This articles examines the provenance and utility of two metaphors commonly used to help describe the dynamics of contemporary combat. It argues that, although it shares the weaknesses of all metaphors in being partially inappropriate and incomplete, the ASDA cycle has greater contemporary relevance than the earlier Boyd or OODA cycle. In 2006, the first edition of the Australian Army’s concept Adaptive Campaigning, capturing the lessons of nearly a decade of Army experimentation, introduced the …
Abstract This article contends that the experience of the early twenty-first century has highlighted a long-term systemic weakness in the formulation and execution of Western military strategy. The need for strategists to focus on people, culture and society is not just a counterinsurgency requirement; rather it should be an indispensible and enduring strand in all strategic calculations. There is a need to immigrate the thinking, methods, products and approach of anthropology into the formulation and …
Abstract The Victorian bush fires of February 2009 swiftly destroyed nearly two thousand homes and took over 170 lives. Yet, equally as swift, and in spite of the extensive damage, the ADF responded quickly and efficiently to this disaster with Operation VICTORIAN FIRES ASSIST. While the success of this operation was obvious for all to see, the author identifies several lessons that can be drawn from this unique experience, examining what worked as well as what did not—and how matters could be improved. To …
… Chauvel Prize 2009 - Colonel Roger Noble …
The Good Soldiers Written by: David Finkel, Scribe Publications, Melbourne, 2009, ISBN: 9780374165734, 287pp. Reviewed by: Major Andrew Shum David Finkel’s The Good Soldiers is raw, confronting and more than a timely reminder of the lessons learnt, hardships faced and indelible physical and emotional scars that are left on those engaged in close counterinsurgency fighting in the modern era. As the current focus of the Coalition and its political masters remains firmly entrenched in the ongoing …
The Human Face of War Written by: Jim Storr, Continuum International Publishing, London, 2009, ISBN: 9781441187505, 256pp. Reviewed by: Justin Kelly Many readers will be aware of Jim Storr through his contributions to various British journals over the last twenty years. A retired Infantry officer, he is a forensic thinker with a strong empiricist bent—one who works from the observed facts towards a theory rather than the other way round. In the latter stages of his military career he was deeply …

Light Horse: A History of Australia’s Mounted Arm Written by: Jean Bou, Cambridge University Press, Melbourne, 2009, ISBN: 9780521197083, 360pp. Reviewed by: John Donovan Jean Bou has written a useful institutional history, which focuses on the roles, development and eventual decline of the Australian mounted arm from colonial times until the last horsed regiment was disbanded. Descriptions of battles are used to illustrate points in the discussion, not as the principal focus of the narrative. Dr Bou …

Captain Bullen’s War: The Vietnam War Diary of Captain John Bullen Written by: Paul Ham (ed), Harper Collins, Pymble, 2009. ISBN: 9780732288433, 474pp. Reviewed by: Bob Hall Captain John Bullen was posted to Vietnam as the OC of the 1st Topographical Survey Troop, part of the 1st Australian Task Force at Nui Dat. To brief his successor on developments, and to inform his family of his activities there, he kept a diary. The diaries were edited by Paul Ham into a lively account of Bullen’s Vietnam tour. …

The Strategy of Terrorism – How it Works and Why it Fails Written by: Peter R Neumann and Michael LR Smith, Routledge, London, 2008, ISBN: 9780415545266, 140pp. Reviewed by: Major Jason Harley This book is a valuable contribution to military studies. Terrorism is a most misunderstood term in both society and academia, and for military practitioners equally so. While the book explores the strategic aspects of terrorism in first principles, it is written in a simple clear manner. It unearths a number of …

‘Sorry, lads, but the order is to go’ – The August Offensive, Gallipoli: 1915 Written by: David W Cameron, UNSW Press, Sydney, 2009, ISBN: 9781742230771, 370pp. Reviewed by: Rhys Crawley After the months of stalemate that followed the failed Gallipoli landings, the Allied high command began to look for new options. They decided to mount a breakout manoeuvre from the Anzac sector to seize the northern heights and eventually cross the peninsula. At the same time there was a new landing at Suvla Bay which …
