REBRANDING THE REBALANCE: ASSESSING U.S.HOW COMPETITORS USE TECHNOLOGY TO SHAPE THE ENVIRONMENT (INDO-PACIFIC SERIES).“FICINT”: ENVISIONING FUTURE WAR THROUGH FICTION & INTELLIGENCE (INDO-PACIFIC SERIES).Brian Adam Jones, public domain Other releases in the Indo-Pacific Region Series: The views expressed in this presentation are those of the speakers and do not necessarily reflect those of the U.S. ![]() Army War College and the Editor-in-Chief of A BETTER PEACE. Whitt is Professor of Strategy at the U.S. Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Amazon Music | Android | iHeartRadio | Stitcher | Podchaser | Podcast Index | TuneIn | RSSĪugust Cole is a nonresident senior fellow at the Scowcroft Center for Strategy and Security at the Atlantic Council. A BETTER PEACE Editor-in-Chief Jacqueline E. Episode 2118: Nigel Farage On The Decline Of The West The American Public Is Disgusted By Merrick Garland. Steve Bannon has multiple guest on the podcast at the same thing allowing for a barrage of up to the minute political information that you cant get anywhere. The approach helps both to raise self-awareness and challenge one’s own assumptions while articulating complex concepts using tried and true writing techniques that emphasis tension, conflict, and clarity. The novel imagines various ways that emerging technologies may be leveraged by both sides in a predominently Indo-Pacific environment.Īugust Cole generalizes this approach in what he calls FICINT - the combination of fiction writing with intelligence to imagine future scenarios in ways grounded in reality. August Cole is both a war futurist at the Atlantic Council and co-author of the novel Ghost Fleet: A Novel of the Next World War with P. A BETTER PEACE welcomes a scholar and author who has done just that. ![]() Conventional war planning may not always provide the best answer, so what are alternatives? One is exploring the future through fiction, where authors can analyze and develop war scenarios from friendly, enemy, and neutral perspectives. ![]() What does the future of war look like? A common trope is that militaries default to fighting the ‘last’ war, leaving themselves exposed when the next war emerges. This episode is the final in a series of releases on the Emerging Environment in the Indo-Pacific Region, produced in collaboration with the United States Military Academy at West Point’s Department of Social Sciences as part of the 2019 Senior Conference. I don’t write science fiction so I can predict the future, but I want to better understand what’s lies ahead
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