Advanced Displays: Windows into Information Warfare (Lance A. Glasser)
In order to fight and win on
the battlefield of the future, U.S. forces must first win the
information war.
Defending Cyberspace and Other Metaphors (Martin Libicki, National Defense
University, NDU Press Book, February 1997)
Conflict has classically been
modeled by orthogonal lines of defense and attack. Today's asymmetric
warfare is about points, blots, and gated fences, topological
forms with particular applicability to information warfare.
Ensuring Joint Force Superiority in the
Information Age
(Defense Issues, Volume 11, Number 82)
We are just scratching the surface
on what can be done. We are just at the beginning of exploiting
information systems for our warfighters.
The Information War (Peter Lamborn Wilson)
Information War and Cyberspace Security (RAND Research Review, Fall
1995)
In this issue of the RAND Research
Review, [we] touch on some of the broad societal implications
of the information revolution and look in greater detail at what
it may mean for the conduct of war and the nation's security.
Information Warfare and Its Importance (USAF Fact Sheet 95-20)
There are many views on what
constitutes information warfare, but the U.S. Air Force defines
it as "any action to deny, exploit, corrupt or destroy
the enemy's information and its functions while protecting Air
Force assets against those actions and exploiting its own military
information operations." Therefore, information warfare
is any action which attacks, protects or uses military information
functions or operations.
The Mesh and the Net - Speculations on
Armed Conflict In an Age of Free Silicon (Martin Libicki, National Defense
University, McNair Paper 28, March 1984)
The Next Enemy (Martin Libicki, National Defense
University, Strategic Forum, INSS, Number 35, July 1995)
Future threats may be divided
into four categories: peers, bullies, terrorism, and chaos. The
threat environment twenty years hence is unlikely to be of one
type. Nevertheless, framing the choices facing planners shows
what the U.S. armed forces might look like if one or another
type of threat were to become the predominant focus of the Defense
Department.
Papers on Information Warfare
The Principles of War in the 21st Century: Strategic
Considerations
(William T. Johnsen Douglas V. Johnson II James O. Kievit Douglas
C. Lovelace, Jr. and Steven Metz)
Because war at the strategic
level is an intellectual process and the development and implementation
of strategy is a creative activity, some form of intellectual
framework is required to shape the strategist's thought processes.
Strategic Information Warfare: A
New Face of War
(Roger C. Molander, Andrew S. Riddile, Peter A. Wilson, RAND 1996)
This report summarizes research
performed by RAND for the Office of the Assistant Secretary of
Defense (Command, Control, Communications and Intelligence).
A Theory of Information Warfare.
Preparing for 2020.
(Colonel Richard Szafranski, USAF)
The United States should expect
that its information systems are vulnerable to attack. It should
further expect that attacks, when they come, may come in advance
of any formal declaration of hostile intent by an adversary state.
The Unintended Consequences of Information
Technologies (Dr. David
S. Alberts, National Defense University, NDU Press Book,
April 1996)
The purpose of this analysis
is to identify a strategy for introducing and using information
age technologies that accomplishes two things: first, the identification
and avoidance of adverse unintended consequences associated with
the introduction and utilization of information technologies;
and second, the ability to recognize and capitalize on unexpected
opportunities.
Weapons of Mass Protection (Chris Morris, Janet Morris, Thomas Baines)
Nonlethality, information warfare,
and airpower in the age of chaos.
What is Information Warfare? (Martin Libicki, National Defense
University, ACIS Papers 3, August 1995)
Libicki separates seven different
forms of information warfare: 1) command-and-control warfare,
2) intelligence-based warfare, 3) electronic warfare, 4) psychological
warfare, 5) hacker warfare, 6) economic information warfare and
7) cyber warfare.