How do military organizations assess strategic policy in war? In this book Scott Gartner develops a theory to explain how military and government leaders evaluate wartime performance, how much they change strategies in response to this evaluation, and why they are frequently at odds when discussing the success or failure of strategic performance. Blending history, decision theory, and mathematical modelling, Gartner argues that military personnel do reevaluate their strategies and that they measure the performance of a strategy through quantitative, 'dominant' indicators. But different actors within a government use different indicators of success : some will see the strategy as succeeding when others see it as failing because of their different dominant indicators. Gartner tests his argument with three case studies: the British shift to convoys in World War I following the German imposition of unrestricted submarine warfare; the lack of change in British naval policy in the Battle of the Atlantic following the German introduction of Wolf Packs in World War II; and the American decision to deescalate in Vietnam after the Tet Offensive.
He also tests his approach in a non-war situation, analyzing the Carter Administration's decision to launch the hostage rescue attempt. In each case, his dominant indicator model better predicts the observed behaviour than either a standard organization or an action-reaction approach.
- ISBN10 0300060343
- ISBN13 9780300060348
- Publish Date 25 August 1997
- Publish Status Out of Print
- Out of Print 9 October 2012
- Publish Country US
- Imprint Yale University Press
- Format Hardcover
- Pages 256
- Language English