
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
The British military spent 20 years fighting in Afghanistan. Considering the UK's achievements against its objectives, defeat seems the most accurate description of the campaign's outcome. How institutions respond to and learn from failure is a good measure of their effectiveness. But Britain's war in Afganistan also saw considerable tactical and operational learning to solve complex problems. Not only are some of the solutions valuable, but the processes by which they were derived bear study. The question is whether these lessons will be retained. This Whitehall Paper delves into some of the many valuable and hard-won lessons that can be derived from a study of British operations in Afganistan, beginning a conversation as to their relevance for future British miliatry undertakings.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover Page
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- About the Authors
- About the Editor
- Introduction
- I Leveraging Intelligence Assessment to Inform Strategy
- II Civil-Military Cooperation: Lessons Repeated Until Learned
- III Sustaining Dispersed Forces
- IV Overcoming the IED Threat in Afghanistan
- V Afghanistan as the Laboratory for Multi-Domain Integration
- VI Kicking the Close Air Support Addiction
- Conclusions