This volume develops information strategy as a construct equal in importance to military strategy as an influential tool of statecraft.
John Arquilla and Douglas A. Borer explore three principal themes:
- the rise of the information domain and information strategy as an equal partner alongside traditional military strategy
- the need to consider the organizational implications of information strategy
- the realm of what has been called information operations (IO) - the building blocks of information strategy - has been too narrowly depicted and must be both broadened and deepened.
Information Strategy and Warfarewill be essential reading for students and practitioners of information strategy, as well as scholars of security studies and military strategy in general.
Introduction: The Rise of Information Strategy Part 1: Confronting Terror and Insurgency 1. The War of Ideas and the Idea of War 2. Thinking about Al Qaeda as a Global Tribe 3. Influence Strategies in Iraq and Beyond 4. Muslim Insurgencies and the Future of Iraq Part 2: Improving Information Strategy 5. Public Diplomacy 6. Strategic Assessment and Information Warfare 7. Rebuilding a Capacity for Deception: The '1% Solution' 8. The Trouble with Psychological Operations 9. Conclusion
John Arquillais Professor of Defense Analysis at the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, California. He is the author of Lessons from the War with Saddam Hussein(RAND, 1991), Dubious Battles(Crane Russak, 1992), and From Troy to Entebbe(University Press of America, 1996), as well as many articles, book chapters, andlĻ