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Hardcover The New Face of War: How War Will Be Fought in the 21st Century Book

ISBN: 0743212495

ISBN13: 9780743212496

The New Face of War: How War Will Be Fought in the 21st Century

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Format: Hardcover

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Book Overview

As American and coalition troops fight the first battles of this new century -- from Afghanistan to Yemen to the Philippines to Iraq -- they do so in ways never before seen. Until recently,... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Pragmatic and On Target

Of all the books currently coming out about modern warfare, THE NEW FACE OF WAR by Bruce Berkowitz is conceptual and pragmatic more than political and personal. Its focus is on the vital role of information and communications, and he makes a cogent case for the primary importance of information in modern warfare by showing the evolving role of both in war, as well as the evolving nature of war, before zeroing in on the present. Not clogged with technical jargon, yet cogent, this book is excellent though being three years old, some of his final conclusions about modern information warfare may no longer hold true.

More anecdotal than I expected

This book is an attempt to look at the modern military, and how wars will, and should, be fought in the future. The idea is to show how wars can be won cheaply, both in lives and in money, and what we need to do in advance to make these things happen. Warfare is changing, as everyone knows. Technology has moved with what seems to be ever-increasing speed, but it's driven weaponry in somewhat unexpected directions. For instance, while nations who participated in the Second World War introduced new tanks at a prodigious rate during the war, and the various Cold War competitors redesigned these vehicles pretty regularly during that period, the United States hasn't had a new tank in about 25 years now: and ours is typically pointed out as the superior tank, in spite of this. What is changing, however, is the technology of information. Nowadays, instead of trying to hit a tank with many bombs or artillery shells, the United States has the capability to use various "smart" munitions which can hit the target from hundreds, even thousands of miles away. This means that the technology level of the target is less important: if it gets killed by a smart bomb, who cares how advanced it *was*? Warfare, then, has transformed from a contest of things like rates of fire, blast radius, and fatigue, to one regarding things like satellite uplinks, reaction times, and global positioning systems. This is the central point of Berkowitz's book: as things change, we need to be paying attention to what warfare has become, not what it was. The author seems to think that some of this has been covered by the Pentagon, but some of it hasn't. Especially in the area of internet security, he believes the military needs to coordinate much better with the private sector to make sure that our systems aren't disrupted at exactly the wrong moment by our enemies. This is the one thing in the book he pretty clearly advocates. The book is sprinkled with interesting and amusing anecdotes, connecting Robert Whitehead, the inventor of the modern torpedo, with the movie the Sound of Music, for instance, and explaining how Robert Ballard, the guy who found the Titanic, also worked looking for sunken subs with his robot submersibles. This makes the subject of the book rather more easy to digest than otherwise. I would recommend this book to anyone interested in the subject, except perhaps someone already very knowledgeable on it.

The Two Faces Of The Book

At the risk of being repetitive, I too will comment on the fact that the title of the book and the dust jacket description seem to be two to three steps removed from the actual writings of the author. Now it could be that I had an unfair expectation, but I expected the book to focus more on how the military uses the new technology available to it to fight wars. I was looking for detailed explanations about how a military unit goes into to battle and fights. With this said the book offered more of a last 50 years review of how technology has changed the way we plan for war, build and buy weapons systems, and overall espionage. An interested topic, but not one that was advertised. I do not read a vast number of these types of books so the rather high level review of many of the topics was enough for me. I can see how if you are well read on the topic and / or work in the fields discussed, this book could come across as light weight, but for a novice it was an interesting review of the topic. The author has a nice light and easy writing style that keeps the reader interested during some entertainingly dangerous technical discussions. I also really liked the side stories the author peppered through the book about topics as diverse as how this computer was designed or how this bit of espionage trick was created. I also picked up on a sense of humor that could be described as being influenced by Star Trek conventions and Dilbert books. Overall I enjoyed the book. I was disappointed at the misrepresentation of the title and could have done with some more detail, but overall it was an interesting easy book to read.

Chocked full of good ideas

Dr. Berkowitz's new book is a terrific follow-on to his previous title, "Best Truth". Rather than focusing on the intelligence community, in this title he takes a long, hard look at current state and direction of the armed forces and gives the reader real insight into how the military can be and is being improved.In order to acheive this, he leans heavily on recent history and the ideas of his contemporaries. One of the ways in which this manifests itself is in examining the strategic brilliance (albeit evil) of the 11 September attacks. In this attack the embedded enemy combatants were well into the execution phase of their OODA cycle before the US became aware of the presence of enemy. Bruce breaks this down into its key components and shows how the US has leveraged the concept of embedding in Iraq and Afghanistan. He also shows how superior information can be such a force multiplier that enemy troop counts become irrelevant to the campaign.If you've admired the work of Drs. Ronfeldt and Arquilla then you should definitely pick up this book. It leverages their work and shows clearly how swarming and zapping can be applied at an army or fleet level.

Warfighting in the new century

I've had a couple of tries at "information warfare" without finishing the book on offer. But Berkowitz personalizes this stuff by tying each aspect to an individual--generally an interesting one. So he kept me reading all the way through. Basically, he argues that in the age of the internet, all the old bets are off. Thus a ragtag band of guerrillas was able to inflict one of the largest calamities upon the United States in its 200-year history. Mohammed Ata held the "high ground" of information technology, while NORAD and the FAA tried and failed to play catchup on September 11, 2001. In Afghanistan, by contrast, the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency, Army, and Air Force seized and kept the high ground. Thus we had Special Forces soldiers mounted on horseback, knowing their exact location by means of Global Positioning satellies, and using lasers to mark targets for B-52 bombers--bombers that had taken, flown to Afghanistan, and orbited for minutes or hours without knowing what their target would be.Well written and definitely worth owning...
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