
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


When Svechen and Hamley were writing about the operational level of war, it is doubtful they envisaged the number of staff and headquarters that would result from their musings. Their reason to exist is often purported to be scale, complexity, or pace in war today but this might all be just hype from academics and their acolytes. Remove the operational level staffs and processes, says Wilf Owen, and militaries can become leaner, smarter and less bureaucratic. He might just have a point.
By Peter Roberts4.8
2323 ratings
When Svechen and Hamley were writing about the operational level of war, it is doubtful they envisaged the number of staff and headquarters that would result from their musings. Their reason to exist is often purported to be scale, complexity, or pace in war today but this might all be just hype from academics and their acolytes. Remove the operational level staffs and processes, says Wilf Owen, and militaries can become leaner, smarter and less bureaucratic. He might just have a point.

1,076 Listeners

142 Listeners

776 Listeners

425 Listeners

227 Listeners

378 Listeners

406 Listeners

70 Listeners

21 Listeners

481 Listeners

151 Listeners

336 Listeners

266 Listeners

193 Listeners

23 Listeners