Maintaining transatlantic strategic, operational and tactical interoperability in an era of austerity

With the end of major combat operations in Afghanistan, how will the North Atlantic alliance maintain the unprecedented levels of interoperability developed over the last decade? One of the most effective means of building and maintaining interoperability—the forward‐based presence of US military fo...

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Main Author: Deni, John R
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: SelectedWorks 2014
Subjects:
War
Online Access:https://works.bepress.com/john-deni/91
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spelling ftusarmywcoll:oai:works.bepress.com:john-deni-1099 2023-05-15T17:34:28+02:00 Maintaining transatlantic strategic, operational and tactical interoperability in an era of austerity Deni, John R 2014-05-12T07:00:00Z https://works.bepress.com/john-deni/91 unknown SelectedWorks https://works.bepress.com/john-deni/91 John Deni Defense and Security Studies Military and Veterans Studies Military History Military War and Peace Public Affairs Strategic Management Policy text 2014 ftusarmywcoll 2022-01-23T10:08:21Z With the end of major combat operations in Afghanistan, how will the North Atlantic alliance maintain the unprecedented levels of interoperability developed over the last decade? One of the most effective means of building and maintaining interoperability—the forward‐based presence of US military forces in Europe— has shrunk significantly over the last 25 years and is likely to shrink further in the coming years, meaning it will become increasingly difficult for American and European military forces to operate side by side. Nevertheless, the United States continues to look to its allies in NATO as the primary partners in maintaining and promoting common interests around the globe. Additionally, Washington seems more committed than ever to wielding force in a coalition context. In order to help remedy this seeming incongruity, Washington announced in early 2012 a plan to deploy rotationally several hundred troops from the United States to Germany for periodic exercises with European partners and allies. However, it remains unclear whether a rotational model will be sufficient to generate the level of interoperability necessary for US forces and those of its most capable European allies to work seamlessly across the range of military operations. The loss of tactical and operational interoperability threatens transatlantic strategic interoperability, and therefore risks decoupling European and American security policy. To mitigate these challenges, the article discusses several policy steps the United States should consider. Text North Atlantic US Army War College Press (USAWC)
institution Open Polar
collection US Army War College Press (USAWC)
op_collection_id ftusarmywcoll
language unknown
topic Defense and Security Studies
Military and Veterans Studies
Military History
Military
War
and Peace
Public Affairs
Strategic Management Policy
spellingShingle Defense and Security Studies
Military and Veterans Studies
Military History
Military
War
and Peace
Public Affairs
Strategic Management Policy
Deni, John R
Maintaining transatlantic strategic, operational and tactical interoperability in an era of austerity
topic_facet Defense and Security Studies
Military and Veterans Studies
Military History
Military
War
and Peace
Public Affairs
Strategic Management Policy
description With the end of major combat operations in Afghanistan, how will the North Atlantic alliance maintain the unprecedented levels of interoperability developed over the last decade? One of the most effective means of building and maintaining interoperability—the forward‐based presence of US military forces in Europe— has shrunk significantly over the last 25 years and is likely to shrink further in the coming years, meaning it will become increasingly difficult for American and European military forces to operate side by side. Nevertheless, the United States continues to look to its allies in NATO as the primary partners in maintaining and promoting common interests around the globe. Additionally, Washington seems more committed than ever to wielding force in a coalition context. In order to help remedy this seeming incongruity, Washington announced in early 2012 a plan to deploy rotationally several hundred troops from the United States to Germany for periodic exercises with European partners and allies. However, it remains unclear whether a rotational model will be sufficient to generate the level of interoperability necessary for US forces and those of its most capable European allies to work seamlessly across the range of military operations. The loss of tactical and operational interoperability threatens transatlantic strategic interoperability, and therefore risks decoupling European and American security policy. To mitigate these challenges, the article discusses several policy steps the United States should consider.
format Text
author Deni, John R
author_facet Deni, John R
author_sort Deni, John R
title Maintaining transatlantic strategic, operational and tactical interoperability in an era of austerity
title_short Maintaining transatlantic strategic, operational and tactical interoperability in an era of austerity
title_full Maintaining transatlantic strategic, operational and tactical interoperability in an era of austerity
title_fullStr Maintaining transatlantic strategic, operational and tactical interoperability in an era of austerity
title_full_unstemmed Maintaining transatlantic strategic, operational and tactical interoperability in an era of austerity
title_sort maintaining transatlantic strategic, operational and tactical interoperability in an era of austerity
publisher SelectedWorks
publishDate 2014
url https://works.bepress.com/john-deni/91
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_source John Deni
op_relation https://works.bepress.com/john-deni/91
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