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Title Byting back : regaining information superiority against 21st-century insurgents / Martin C. Libicki [and others] ; prepared for the Office of the Secretary of Defense
Published Santa Monica, CA : Rand Corp., 2007

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Description 1 online resource (xxxiv, 159 pages)
Series Rand counterinsurgency study ; v. 1
Rand counterinsurgency study ; v. 1.
Contents The influence of user requirements -- The registry-census -- A well-wired country -- Embedded video -- A national wiki -- The principles of ICON -- Implications and implementation
Summary U.S. counterinsurgency efforts in Iraq and Afghanistan have failed to exploit information power, which could be a U.S. advantage but instead is being used advantageously by insurgents. Because insurgency and counterinsurgency involve a battle for the allegiance of a population between a government and an armed opposition movement, the key to exploiting information power is to connect with and learn from the population itself, increasing the effectiveness of both the local government and the U.S. military and civilian services engaged in supporting it. Utilizing mostly available networking technology, the United States could achieve early, affordable, and substantial gains in the effectiveness of counterinsurgency by more open, integrated, and inclusive information networking with the population, local authorities, and coalition partners. The most basic information link with the population would be an information technology (IT)-enhanced, fraud-resistant registry-census. The most promising link would come from utilizing local cell phone networks, which are proliferating even among poor countries. Access to data routinely collected by such networks can form the basis for security services such as enhanced-911 and forensics. The cell phones of a well-wired citizenry can be tantamount to sensor fields in settled areas. They can link indigenous forces with each other and with U.S. forces without interoperability problems; they can also track the responses of such forces to emergencies. Going further, outfitting weaponry with video cameras would bolster surveillance, provide lessons learned, and guard against operator misconduct. Establishing a national Wiki can help citizens describe their neighborhoods to familiarize U.S. forces with them and can promote accountable service delivery. All such information can improve counterinsurgency operations by making U.S. forces and agencies far better informed than they are at present. The authors argue that today's military and intelligence networks -- being closed, compartmentalized, controlled by information providers instead of users, and limited to U.S. war fighters -- hamper counterinsurgency and deprive the United States of what ought to be a strategic advantage. In contrast, based on a review of 160 requirements for counterinsurgency, the authors call for current networks to be replaced by an integrated counterinsurgency operating network (ICON) linking U.S. and indigenous operators, based on principles of inclusiveness, integration, and user preeminence. Utilizing the proposed ways of gathering information from the population, ICON would improve the timeliness, reliability, and relevance of information, while focusing security restrictions on truly sensitive information. The complexity and sensitivity of counterinsurgency call for vastly better use of IT than has been seen in Iraq and Afghanistan. Here is a practical plan for just that
Notes "RAND National Defense Research Institute."
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 157-159)
Notes English
Print version record
Subject Insurgency.
Military art and science -- United States
Afghan War, 2001-2021.
Iraq War, 2003-2011.
POLITICAL SCIENCE -- Political Process -- Political Advocacy.
POLITICAL SCIENCE -- Security (National & International)
Insurgency
Military art and science
Iraq
United States
Form Electronic book
Author Libicki, Martin C.
National Defense Research Institute (U.S.)
ISBN 9780833042880
0833042882
1281181277
9781281181275
9786611181277
661118127X