Incremental change frequently outperforms radical change. Revolutionary programs often failed or underperformed; evolutionary improvements to existing systems frequently delivered more capability more reliably. The decisions that sustained continuous improvement - investing in upgrades, training enhancements, and procedural refinements - often outperformed dramatic transformations.
Key Takeaways
-
▸
Military capability is the product of thousands of decisions interacting over decades. No single choice, however important, determines outcomes independently.
-
▸
The most consequential decisions often involved unglamorous domains: logistics, training, organization, and procedures rather than combat platforms.
-
▸
Assumptions embedded in decisions persist long after the conditions that justified them change. Institutional memory is both strength and limitation.
-
▸
Every decision accepts tradeoffs; optimization for one scenario creates vulnerabilities in others. Understanding what was traded away explains limitations.
-
▸
Human capital investments - training, education, professional development - frequently outperform equipment investments in generating combat effectiveness.
-
▸
Standardization creates alliance cohesion that political agreements alone cannot achieve. Interoperability requires sustained, unglamorous investment.
-
▸
Logistics determines what is operationally possible. Combat power exists only where and when logistics can sustain it.
-
▸
Decisions to maintain capability during peacetime enable options during crisis that just-in-time approaches cannot provide.
-
▸
Institutional reforms often require external forcing functions - legislation, crisis, or exceptional leadership - because institutions do not reform themselves.
-
▸
Technology creates opportunities that doctrine must exploit; technology without appropriate doctrine underperforms its potential.
-
▸
Forward investment in research creates options; waiting until needs are apparent forfeits the development time required to create solutions.
-
▸
Realistic training transforms paper capability into actual proficiency. What units have never practiced, they cannot reliably execute.
-
▸
The decisions that shape military power are made by people who cannot know what challenges their successors will face. Foresight has limits; adaptability compensates.
Modern warfare was not shaped primarily by dramatic battles or revolutionary weapons. It was shaped by hundreds of decisions - about doctrine, procurement, training, organization, logistics, and technology - that individually seemed incremental but collectively transformed what military forces could accomplish. Understanding these decisions illuminates not just military history but the ongoing process through which military capability is created, sustained, and sometimes squandered.
The decisions examined here span decades and domains, but they share common features. They addressed genuine problems, accepted unavoidable tradeoffs, and produced consequences - intended and otherwise - that persisted long after the decision-makers moved on. They were made by people operating with imperfect information about threats, technologies, and future operations. And they embedded assumptions that sometimes proved prophetic and sometimes created vulnerabilities their makers never anticipated.
Contemporary military forces remain products of decisions made years and decades ago. The platforms in service, the doctrine guiding their employment, the training preparing their crews, and the logistics sustaining their operations all reflect choices made under conditions that no longer exist. Understanding this heritage - what was decided, why, and with what effect - provides essential context for evaluating current capabilities and future investments.