Redefining combat: current operations shape army war game.Among the hard lessons the U.S. Army is learning in Iraq is that the line between "major combat" and "stability operations" is blurred, at best, and that the enemy gets to decide when the war is finally over. The turn of events in Iraq during the past year heavily influenced an Army war game conducted last month, which started with a series of regional conflicts that were supposed to transition to post-combat stability operations. The transition, however, did not happen as planned, because the "red" fictitious Based upon a fabrication or pretense. A fictitious name is an assumed name that differs from an individual's actual name. A fictitious action is a lawsuit brought not for the adjudication of an actual controversy between the parties but merely for the purpose of enemy force, like the Iraqi insurgents Insurgents, in U.S. history, the Republican Senators and Representatives who in 1909–10 rose against the Republican standpatters controlling Congress, to oppose the Payne-Aldrich tariff and the dictatorial power of House speaker Joseph G. Cannon. , decided to extend the fight, and drive the "blue" U.S. force to exhaustion and frustration. The war game, called Unified Quest 2004, was staged during two weeks in early May at the U.S. Army War College The United States Army War College is a United States Army school located in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, on the 500 acre (2 km²) campus of the historic Carlisle Barracks, a military post dating back to the 1770s. , in Carlisle, Pa., where hundreds of players--active-duty, retired officers and civilians--fought two major regional wars set in 2015. The U.S. Joint Forces Command and the Army co-sponsored the game. Whereas previous war games had been criticized for being unrealistic and far-fetched, Unified Quest in many ways mirrored current events, and could lead to major revisions in Army doctrine and weapon procurement plans. The scenario devised for Unified Quest has the blue force engaged in a major conflict against a Middle-Eastern country called Nair. Another contingency also erupts in the Pacific area, where Islamic fundamentalist fundamentalist An investor who selects securities to buy and sell on the basis of fundamental analysis. Compare technician. rebels are trying to topple the secular and corrupt U.S.-friendly government of Sumesia. In both conflicts, the red commanders pinpointed the greatest weak ness of their blue enemy: being unprepared for a protracted pro·tract tr.v. pro·tract·ed, pro·tract·ing, pro·tracts 1. To draw out or lengthen in time; prolong: disputants who needlessly protracted the negotiations. 2. guerilla war and misjudging the enemy's will to fight. Blue's difficulties in many ways stemmed from the U.S. Army's long-held notions that major combat and stability operations are cut-and-dried terms, noted Army Maj. Gen. Janaes M. Dubik, director of joint experimentation at U.S. Joint Forces Command. When blue wants to go into stability operations, but red decides to engage in "irregular combat," it instantly creates an "asymmetric" advantage for red, Dubik told reporters. The implication for today's Army is that it needs to "redefine combat" and make sure forces are trained for all phases of conflict. The force-development concepts and doctrine for major combat and stability operations originally were written under separate cover, to help "get our intellectual arms around them," Dubik said. This custom of labeling operations either as major combat or stability had practical and unintended consequences For the "Law of unintended consequences", see Unintended consequence Unintended Consequences is a novel by author John Ross, first published in 1996 by Accurate Press. that are seen in Iraq now, where, for example, U.S. forces trained at home base for humanitarian and rebuilding missions deployed to Iraq with light unarmored vehicles, and ended up engaged in guerilla-style warfare. As Unified Quest unfolded, it was clear that "major combat and stability occur simultaneously," said David Ozolck, deputy for joint experimentation at JFCOM JFCOM Joint Forces Command (formerly ACOM change effective 1 Oct 99) . The commanders of the red forces, all retired U.S. military officers, said they were given latitude under the rules of the game to drink like the enemy and not to be constrained by the ethical dilemmas An ethical dilemma is a situation that will often involve an apparent conflict between moral imperatives, in which to obey one would result in transgressing another. This is also called an ethical paradox and the values with which they grew up. The head of the red Nair force, retired Army Col. Gary Phillips Gary Phillips may refer to:
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