Robb on the Future of War and Peace
Brave New War inspired a broad range of reactions. The most useful criticisms I read faulted it for lacking any rigorous exploration of long-term remedies.
Robb looks to be addressing this criticism head-on with his next book on resilient communities. I see this as the prescription following the diagnosis of Brave New War. Given the future of war, what does the future of peace need to look like in response? This perspective seems to be reflected in his new (at least to me) “About” page where he explicitly ties these two threads of thought together.
The resilient community, however, is just one component of the broader reaction to Robb’s diagnosis of future of war. A necessary component, perhaps, but not sufficient. One of the things I’m thinking about is what cross-community platforms support resilience. Put another way, what changes do governments need to make in order to become resilient? Following this line of thinking leads to a realignment of the DoD’s strategic priorities. Instant infrastructure represents one of the critical capabilities for prevailing in future SSTR environments. As Robb described it:
In this context, assured electrical power is a strategic asset. OSD leaders should think systematically about growing the DoD’s capability to deploy instant electrical infrastructure during the “golden window” in order to assure that we prevail in future SSTR operations.[We need to think about investing in] communities in a box. One of the things we see again and again is the need for the ability to provide instant infrastructure to damaged communities. This ranges from a community cut off due to security needs in counter-insurgency to disaster relief. How do you package infrastructure for 20-30,000 people in a box? The military should be solving this.
Previous OSD posts on this topic:
Global Guerillas and Instant Infrastructure
Green Power for SysAdmin
