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Annotations on Planning for Conflict by William Flavin

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Please use the word doc as directions. I am including a sample word doc of what the document should look like with comments. Please use the pdf for the document that needs the comments. Tank you!

This assignment asks that you read throughout the article and annotate the text in a thoughtful way.

To earn full credit for this assignment, you must make a minimum of 8 thoughtful posts/comments throughout the document.

Note: I do not need a write up. Just like you have done previously in the sample word doc I’m providing, I need you to make comments on the document. You need to convert the pdf document in word in order to make comments unless you can make comments on the pdf directly. I wrote in the instructions that "Read the document and annotate it as desired" and the document must be marked up with your thought provoking comments and at least 8 thoughtful comments/posts. Thank you!

 

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Warfare studies
Student’s Name
College/University
Course
Professor’s Name
Due Date
Planning for Conflict
Termination and
Post-Conflict Success
WILLIAM FLAVIN
“No one starts a war—or rather, no one in his senses ought to do so—without first being clear in his mind what he intends to achieve by that war and how he intends to conduct it.”
— Carl von Clausewitz 1
I
“If you concentrate exclusively on victory, with no thought for the after effect, you may be too exhausted to profit by the peace, while it is almost certain that the peace will be a bad one, containing the germs of another war.” — B. H. Liddell Hart 2
t is always easier to get into a conflict than to get out of one. In 1956, for example, British Prime Minister Anthony Eden with French Premier Guy Mollet planned to unseat President Nasser of Egypt and reduce his influence in the region by a combined and coordinated British, French, and Israeli military operation. The French and British leadership conducted detailed, thorough planning to ensure that the costs and risks were reduced to an acceptable minimum. In violation of Clausewitz’s guidance above, however, the operation was launched without a good idea about termination and what the post-conflict situation would look like. What if landing on the Suez Canal at Port Said and Port Fuad did not force Nasser to step down? Were France and Britain then willing to march on Cairo? Would they have international support for such a move? If they seized Cairo, what would the new Egyptian government look like? Could it stay in power without keeping British and French troops in Egypt for years to come? Would the British and French have world opinion on their side for such an occupation?
In the event, Israel launched the attack and British and French forces landed on the Suez Canal. But the operation did not turn out as planned. The United States and Soviets, along with world opinion, forced the British and French to withdraw. President Nasser, rather than being defeated, became the victor and the leader of the Arab cause, while the British and the French lost prestige and influence. How could rational decisionmakers get it so wrong?3
This article examines the doctrinal basis for conflict termination planning and provides suggestions and approaches for greater success.
Fundamentals
Conflict termination is the formal end of fighting, not the end of conflict. US doctrine holds that the goal of military operations is to set conditions that compel belligerents’ decisionmakers to end hostilities on terms favorable to the United States and its allies. US joint doctrine and NATO doctrine state: “If the conditions have been properly set and met for ending the conflict, the necessary leverage should exist to prevent the adversary from renewing hostilities. . . . When friendly forces can freely impose their will on the adversary, the opponent may have to accept defeat, terminate active hostilities, or revert to other types of conflict such as geopolitical actions or guerrilla warfare.”4 The definition focuses on conflict termination, not conflict resolution. The military fight may stop without the causes of the confl...
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