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  •  Nanotechnology and International Security  - http://www.foresight.org/Conferences/MNT05/Papers/Gubrud/index.html
     How technologies emerging over the coming decades will undermine military stability while causing economic and political turmoil. The need to move beyond deterrence to an integrated international security system. Article by Mark Avrum Gubrud, Center for Superconductivity Research, University of Maryland, 1997.
  •  Information Warfare  - http://www.plausiblefutures.com/index.php?cat=6694a
     Articles about information warfare, nanowar, and other future conflict scenarios from Plausible Futures Newsletter.
  •  Has Warfare Changed? Sorting Apples from Oranges  - http://www.ausa.org/PDFdocs/lpe02-3.pdf
     States the difference between the conduct of war and the nature of war, and its practical consequences in the information age. Author: James M.Dubik, Landpower Essay, Institute of Landwarfare, July 2002.
  •  The Network Is the Battlefield  - http://www.businessweek.com/print/technology/content/jan2003/tc2003017_2464.htm?tc&sub=03miltech
     The Pentagon's aim is to meld weapons systems and people into a whole, called network-centric warfare, that's greater than the sum of its parts. From Business Week Online, January 2003.
  •  Swarming - The Next Face of the Battle  - http://www.rand.org/commentary/100703AWST.html
     Technological advances often give rise to new types of weapons, but the achievement of lasting breakthroughs in fighting power requires organizational and doctrinal innovation. Opinion article by J. Arquilla and D. Ronfeldt, Aviation Week & Space Technology, September 2003.
  •  Chinese Views of Future Warfare  - http://www.au.af.mil/au/awc/awcgate/ndu/chinview/chinacont.html
     Collection of articles about doctrine of future types and causes of warfare, future threats of security environment, short-term future challenges for possible local war, and long-term future warfare from the point of view of several Chinese authors. Publisher: Institute for National Strategic Studies, US - National Defense University.
  •  Historical Perspectives on Future War  - http://www.au.af.mil/au/awc/awcgate/milreview/baumann-marapr97.htm
     Shows how thinking deeply about the future of war requires careful reflection on its past, by Robert F. Baumann, 1997.
  •  Watch on the West: War and Strategy in the 21st Century  - http://www.fpri.org/ww/0304.200202.black.warandstrategy21stcentury.html
     Describes how events in the Twenty-first Century will test the limits to American strength but not its fundamentals and postulates that these tests will underscore the inability of technology to overcome all challenges, by Jeremy Black, February 2002.
  •  Chemical and Biological Warfare in the 21st Century  - http://www.vectorsite.net/twgas5.html
     The zigzag evolution of chemical and biological weapons in the 20th century give causes for both optimism and pessimism in the course it will take in the 21st, by Greg Goebel, Jun 2003.
  •  Fourth Generation Warfare: How Tactics of the Weak Confound the Strong  - http://d-n-i.net/fcs/comments/c490.htm
     Postulates that today's global environment is defined by the 4th Generation War reality, with nation-states confronting criminal enterprises, fanatical opportunists, and terrorists whose gang-like networks transcend national boundaries. All these actors often slip through the cracks of security, military, and legal bureaucracies. Opinion article by G.I. Wilson, John P. Sullivan, and Hal Kempfer, Military.Com, September 2003.
  •  Fourth Generation Warfare  - http://d-n-i.net/fcs/pdf/4GW_wilson-wilcox_boyd_conf_2002.pdf
     Slide show that summarizes the key aspects of asymmetric conflicts, by Greg Wilcox and G.I. Wilson for Boyd Comference, 2002.
  •  Nation-State Failure: A Recurring Phenomenon?  - http://www.odci.gov/nic/PDF_GIF_2020_Support/2003_11_06_papers/panel2_nov6.pdf
     Analyzes the weakness and failure of nation-states as a potential source of future conflicts. Essay by Robert Rotberg, for NIC 2020 Project, Inaugural Workshop, November 2003.
  •  Military Role in Countering Terrorist Use of WMD  - http://www.au.af.mil/au/awc/awcgate/cpc-pubs/dickinson.htm
     The article shows how the end of the Cold War created a new-world order and presented new challenges for future leaders, such as countering the ever growing terrorist threat. Accompanying this threat is a proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, now available to individuals, as well as groups and nations. Author: Lansing E. Dickinson, Counterproliferation Paper No. 1, USAF Counterproliferation Center, Air War College, 1999.
  •  The Kingdom of Chaos or What Hath the Great Subversive Wrought?  - http://www.centrotocqueville.org.ar/htm/htm/nab/nb10050401in.htm
     The article describes the state of chaos of the post-Cold War world, with a steady increase of entropy and anomie, and a crisis of former models of leadership. Also, analyzes the nature of future conflicts and the role of United States and Europe as key players within this new environment. Authors: Norman A. Bailey and Criton M. Zoakos, published by the Center for Hemispheric Studies Alexis de Tocqueville.
  •  The Future of War and the American Military  - http://www.harvardmagazine.com/on-line/050218.html
     Shows how the process of developing and building new weapons, as does the process of recruiting and training new military officers takes decades, so that, leaders need to be futurists by making statements, implicitly or explicitly, about what they think will be useful many years ahead. By, Stephen Peter Rosen, Harvard Magazine, May-June 2002.
  •  Biotechnology and Water Security in the 21st Century  - http://www.worldwatercouncil.org/Vision/Documents/Biotech-report.PDF
     A report about the future consequences of water scarcity worldwide. It states the urgency of confronting the potential crisis and conflicts on all fronts, from research to policy and action. By Panel on Biotechnology of the World Commission on Water for the 21st Century, February 1999.
  •  The Changing Face of War: Into the Fourth Generation  - http://www.d-n-i.net/fcs/4th_gen_war_gazette.htm
     An article that intends to anticipate what the future conflicts will be like. Introduces the concept of fourth generation war. By William S. Lind, Keith Nightengale, John F. Schmitt, Joseph W. Sutton and Gary I. Wilson, published in Marine Corps Gazette, October 1989.
  •  Changing the Paradigm of the War  - http://www.d-n-i.net/fcs/daskal_changing_paradigms.htm
     A paper about the nature of fourth generation warfare and the form it may take in Middle East. By Steve Daskal, November 2003.
  •  NIC - 2020 Project  - http://www.cia.gov/nic/NIC_2020_project.html
     Information about a research project aimed at covering influences that would shape the world to the year 2020. Contains papers about the nature of future conflicts. Sponsored by the US National Intelligence Council.
  •  Thinking Asymmetrically in Times of Terror  - http://carlisle-www.army.mil/usawc/Parameters/02spring/gray.htm
     An approach to the better understanding of asymmetric threats. By Colin S. Gray, Parameters, US Army War College Quarterly - Spring 2002.
  •  Homeland Security: The New Role for Defense  - http://www.ndu.edu/inss/strforum/SF189/sf189.htm
     Shows the change of US strategic vision of national and global security after September 11 attacks, by Steven J. Tomisek. Strategic Forum No.189, February 2002.
  •  A Military for the 21st Century: Lessons from the Recent Past  - http://www.ndu.edu/inss/strforum/SF181/sf181.htm
     A study about the required post-Cold War military transformation which takes into account the changing nature of war and the experiences of past conflicts. By Anthony C. Zinni, Strategic Forum, US National Defense University, July 2001.
  •  The New Craft of Intelligence: Achieving Asymmetric Advantage in the Face of Non Traditional Threats  - http://www.carlisle.army.mil/ssi/pubs/display.cfm/hurl/PubID=217
     A paper where the author, Robert M. Steele, examines two paradigm shifts--one in relation to the threat and a second in relation to intelligence methods-- while offering a new model for threat analysis and a new model for intelligence operations in non-traditional asymmetric warfare. Strategic Studies Institute, US Army War College, February 2002.
  •  Globalization and the Nature of War  - http://www.carlisle.army.mil/ssi/pubs/display.cfm?pubID=215&CFID=56652&CFTOKEN=42523302
     The article shows how globalization is enhancing the role of political guidance and changing the nature of war. Author: Antulio Echevarria II. Strategic Studies Institute (SSI) of the US Army War College, 2003.
  •  Fighting in the Gray Zone. A Strategy to Close the Preemption Gap.  - http://www.carlisle.army.mil/ssi/pubs/display.cfm/hurl/PubID=412
     The US 2002 National Security Strategy (NSS) identified the proliferation, privatization, and acquisition of weapons of mass destruction by terrorist groups and rogue states as the critical nontraditional threat of the 21st century. Published in September 2004, US Army War College. Authored by Joanne M. Fish, Samuel F. McCraw and Christopher J. Reddish.
  •  Future War: What Trends in the America Post-Cold War Tell Us About Early 21st Century Warfare  - http://www.analysiscenter.northropgrumman.com/files/future_war.pdf
     Examines the performance of U.S. forces in three major post-Cold War military conflicts to identify commonalities and trends that may have implications for the conduct of warfare in the early 21st Century. By Christopher J. Bowie, Robert P. Haffa Jr. and Robert E. Mullins, Analysis Center Papers,Northrop Grumman Corporation, 2003.
  •  Will Special Ops Success Change the Face of War?  - http://www.nationaldefensemagazine.org/issues/2002/Feb/Will_Special.htm
     The role of U.S. special operations forces in future conflicts explained by a number of specialists. Author: Harold Kennedy, National Defense Magazine, Feb 2002.
  •  Evolution of War  - http://www.defense-and-society.org/fcs/defense_death_spiral/5_evolution.htm
     A slide presentation showing the past, present and future of the war.
  •  Fourth Generation Warfare Is Here!  - http://www.virginia.edu/soasia/newsletter/Fall01/warfare.html
     Harold A. Gould and Franklin C. Spinney review the changes after September 11th attacks. University of Virginia, USA, Fall, 2001.
  •  A Warning from Clausewitz on 4GW  - http://www.counterpunch.org/lind03082003.html
     William S. Lind alerts about the dangers for USA of being the only superpower. CounterPunch, March 2003.
  •  The Dangers of Warfare in a Media Age  - http://www.inthenationalinterest.com/Articles/Vol2Issue16/vol2issue16howardpfv.html
     The author alerts about the dangers of the contemporary media age, in which events across the world are instantly brought before vast international audiences, for example, that tomorrow’s wars could be at risk of being overly influenced by the views of spectator audiences, at the expense of the considerations that ought to guide policy-makers, such as the assessment of the national interest. By Roger Howard, April 2003.
  •  Warfare in the 21st Century  - http://www.carlisle.army.mil/library/bibs/warfar03.htm
     Books, documents, articles and web sites. References gathered in a selected bibliography compiled by Jane E. Gibish, U.S. Army War College Library, July 2003.
  •  War Paradigm  - http://www.omninerd.com/articles/articles.php?aid=1
     A look into the fundamental changes happening in warfare and how they may, in turn, effect the world system. By Will Waddell, June 2004.
  •  Beyond vom Kriege: The Character and Conduct of Modern War  - http://carlisle-www.army.mil/usawc/Parameters/05summer/hooker.pdf
     An effort to understand war and the role of armed forces in modern societies, based on the last years experiences and the classic theories. Author: R.D.Hooker Jr., Parameters, US Army War College Quarterly , Summer 2005.