NATO- Hybrid war – does it even exist? ...
In
the last decade, some of the most important military forces and
coalitions in the world, including the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization (NATO), have attempted to address and counter so-called
hybrid threats. Rather than develop strategies based on ‘hybrid’
challenges (an elusive and catch-all term), I believe decision-makers
should stay away from it and consider warfare for what it has always
been: a complex set of interconnected threats and forceful means waged
to further political motives.
The term ‘hybrid warfare’ appeared at least as
early as 2005 and was subsequently used to describe the strategy used by
the Hezbollah in the 2006 Lebanon War. Since then, the term “hybrid”
has dominated much of the discussion about modern and future warfare, to
the point where it has been adopted by senior military leaders and
promoted as a basis for modern military strategies.
The gist of the debate is that modern adversaries
make use of conventional/unconventional, regular/irregular, overt/covert
means, and exploit all the dimensions of war to combat the Western
superiority in conventional warfare. Hybrid threats exploit the
“full-spectrum” of modern warfare; they are not restricted to
conventional means.
In
practice, any threat can be hybrid as long as it is not limited to a
single form and dimension of warfare. When any threat or use of force is
defined as hybrid, the term loses its value and causes confusion
instead of clarifying the “reality” of modern warfare.
A
destroyed tank is seen along a road on the territory controlled by the
self-proclaimed Luhansk People's Republic near airport of Luhansk, in
Luhansk region, eastern Ukraine, November 19, 2014. © REUTERS
There
is no discussion that adversaries, past and present, have developed
creative uses of the “full-spectrum” of warfare, including the use of
regular and irregular tactics across all dimensions of war. Altogether
this may well form a hybrid set of threats and strategy, but it is not
clear why the term “hybrid” should be used, beside its mere descriptive
value.
In practice, any threat can be hybrid as long as it
is not limited to a single form and dimension of warfare. When any
threat or use of force is defined as hybrid, the term loses its value
and causes confusion instead of clarifying the “reality” of modern
warfare.
Another issue with everything “hybrid” is that the
use of a new term suggests there is something new about modern warfare -
while this may not be the case. In his seminal book on Future Warfare,
renowned military strategist Colin Gray convincingly argues that future,
and by extension modern, warfare is essentially more of the same.
Most, if not all, conflicts in the history of
mankind have been defined by the use of asymmetries that exploit an
opponent’s weaknesses, thus leading to complex situations involving
regular/irregular and conventional/unconventional tactics. Similarly,
the rise of cyber warfare has not fundamentally changed the nature of
warfare, but expanded its use in a new dimension.
A Ukrainian serviceman operates a drone during a training session outside Kiev, November 6, 2014. © REUTERS
At
a recent event sponsored by NATO and organized by the Atlantic Council,
attendees were told that “there is no agreed definition of terms
related to hybrid warfare.” In other words, the 28 members of the North
Atlantic Alliance cannot agree on a clear definition of what they are
facing. How can NATO leaders expect to develop an effective military
strategy if they cannot define what they believe is the threat of the
day?
So my recommendation is that NATO, and other
Western decision-makers, should forget about everything “hybrid” and
focus on the specificity and the interconnectedness of the threats they
face. Warfare, whether it be ancient or modern, hybrid or not, is always
complex and can hardly be subsumed into a single adjective. Any
effective strategy should take this complex environment into account and
find ways to navigate it without oversimplifying.
Για να επικοινωνήσετε μαζί μας:spyrosjt@yahoo.gr
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