Cornwallis IX StadtSchlaining, Austria 5

Download Report

Transcript Cornwallis IX StadtSchlaining, Austria 5

Cornwallis IX
Stadtschlaining, Austria
5-8 April 2004
E. P. Visco
[email protected]
IAMWG
23 April 2004
Evidence Based Research
Vienna, VA
Cornwallis Group:
Who, What, Why?
• Small gaggle: US & UK
• Early 1990s: dissatisfaction
with conventional symposia
(esp. ISMOR & MORS)
– Insufficient time
– New problems, new approaches
• First meeting, April 1996
• Cornwallis I thru VIII at
Pearson Peacekeeping Centre,
Nova Scotia, Cda
• Cornwallis IX designed to
attract more Europeans
Proceedings
I. Analytic Approaches to the Study of
Future Conflict
II. Analysis for and of the Resolution
of Conflict
III. Analysis for Peace Operations
IV. Analysis for Civil-Military
Interactions
V. Analysis for Crisis Response and
Societal Reconstruction
VI. Analysis for Assessment, Evaluation
and Crisis Management
VII. Analysis for Compliance and Peace
Building
VIII.Analysis for Governance and
Stability
Proceedings Available
• Canadian Peacekeeping Press,
Pearson Peacekeeping Centre,
Cornwallis Park, PO Box 100,
Clementsport, NS B0S 1E0,
Canada
• Tel: 902.638.8611 x161 or 164
• Fascimile: 902.638.3310
• [email protected]
• http://www.cdnpeacekeeping.ns.ca
Cornwallis IX Key Notes
• Dayton Maxwell: Are We
Reaching the Threshold on
Overcoming the Obstacles to
Effective Civil-Military
Cooperation on Mission
Achievement?
• COL Graf von Strachwitz: On
Afghanistan
Peace Analysis
• Walter Clark, US: Doing it the
hard way: civil-military policies
in Iraq and Afghanistan
• Ian Mitchell & John Medhurst,
UK: Winning the Peace--Scope
and Management Implications
of Analysis of Stabilization and
Counter-Terrorist Operations
• Dave Davis, US: Analytic
Support to a Civilian
Headquarters--The Cornwallis
Approach
• LTC Christopher J. Holshek,
US: Civil-Military and
Information Operations in Iraq:
Finding Success in Synergy
Peace Analysis (concluded)
• Larry Wentz & Michael
Baranick, US: Stability and
Reconstruction Operations:
What we can learn from history
• Michael Neighbour, UK:
Analysis Capabilities for Peace
Support Operations: A personal
perspective
• COL Richard Cousens & Robert
Bailey, UK: Presence in Peace
Operations
• Scott Feil, US: Application of
Metrics to Iraqi Reconstruction
Counter-Terrorism
• Cecilia C. Dionco Noble &
Dennis Legaspi, PI: Information
Operations as a Tool of
Stabilization Operations in
Counter-Terrorism
• Richard Hayes & Margaret Daly
Hayes, US: Measuring
Terrorism and Insurgency in a
21st Century Context
• Manfred Bartha, GE: Homeland
Security
Counter-Terrorism
(concluded)
• A. D. Hossack, et al, UK: The
Behaviour of Counter-Terrorist
Campaigns: Results from
Historical Analysis, including
Observations on Current
Operations in Iraq
• Karl Bertsche, GE: Agent Based
Simulation of Terrorist Attacks
Military Analysis
• Hugh Richardson, UK: EffectsBased Operations: the Analysis
Challenge
• George Rose, UK: The Role of
the NATO Code of Best
Practice for Provision of
Analysis Advice in New
Operational Scenarios
• A. J. Hopkins, UK: Operational
Analysis in Support of HQ
MND(SE), Basrah, Iraq, 2003
New Tools for Analysis
• Lorna Frewer, UK: AgentBased Modeling
• S. Andes Christensson, SW:
How do we find robust
definitions of feedback
indicators signifying stabilities
in counter-terrorism operations
• Panel (Maxwell, Davis, Rose, &
T. Woodcock), US & UK:
Modeling and Analysis
Requirements to Meet the
Challenge of New and
Emerging Conflicts
Summation
• Attendees
–
–
–
–
–
–
United States: 12
United Kingdom: 12
Germany: 4
Philippine Islands: 2
Sweden: 2
Canada: 1
• Presenters: 24
• Papers:
–
–
–
–
Peace-related: 11
Counter-terrorism: 5
Military analysis: 3
New tools/tasks: 3