Military exercise

(Redirected from War exercise)

A military exercise, training exercise, maneuver (manoeuvre), or war game is the employment of military resources in training for military operations. Military exercises are conducted to explore the effects of warfare or test tactics and strategies without actual combat. They also ensure the combat readiness of garrisoned or deployable forces prior to deployment from a home base.

Marines moving between cover during a bilateral military exercise between the United States Marine Corps and Italian Armed Forces, 2019

While both war games and military exercises aim to simulate real conditions and scenarios for the purpose of preparing and analyzing those scenarios, the distinction between a war game and a military exercise is determined, primarily, by the involvement of actual military forces within the simulation, or lack thereof. Military exercises focus on the simulation of real, full-scale military operations in controlled hostile conditions in attempts to reproduce war time decisions and activities for training purposes or to analyze the outcome of possible war time decisions. War games, however, can be much smaller than full-scale military operations, do not typically include the use of functional military equipment, and decisions and actions are carried out by artificial players to simulate possible decisions and actions within an artificial scenario which usually represents a model of a real-world scenario. Additionally, mathematical modeling is used in the simulation of war games to provide a quantifiable method of deduction. However, it is rare that a war game is depended upon for quantitative results, and the use of war games is more often found in situations where qualitative factors of the simulated scenario are needed to be determined.[1]

The actual use of war games and the results that they can provide are limited by possibilities. War games cannot be used to achieve predictive results, as the nature of war and the scenarios that war games aim to simulate are not deterministic. Therefore, war games are primarily used to consider multiple possible outcomes of any given decision, or number of decisions, made in the simulated scenario. These possible outcomes are analyzed and compared, and cause-and-effect relationships are typically sought for the unknown factors within the simulation. It is typically the relationships between visual aspects of the simulation that aid in the assessment of the problems that are simulated within war games, like geographic locations and positionings that would be difficult to discern or analyze at full-scale and for complex environments.[2]

Military exercises involving multiple branches of the same military are known as joint exercises, while military exercises involving two or more countries are known as combined, coalition, bilateral, or multilateral exercises, depending on the nature of the relationship between the countries and the number of them involved. These exercises allow for better coordination between militaries and observation of enemy tactics, and serve as a visible show of strength and cooperation for the participating countries.[3] According to a 2021 study, joint military exercises within well-defined alliances usually deter adversaries without producing a moral hazard because of the narrow scope of the alliance, while joint military exercises outside of an alliance (which are extremely rare) usually lead to conflict escalation.[4]

Exercises in the 20th and 21st centuries have often been identified by a unique code name, such as Cobra Gold, in the same manner as military contingency operations and combat operations like Operation Phantom Fury.

Military exercises are sometimes used as cover for the build up to an actual invasion, as in the cases of the Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia and the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, or it can provoke opponents at peace to perceive it as such, as in the case of Able Archer 83.

Military exercise in Ystad, Sweden in 2015

Types

edit

Command post

edit

A Command Post Exercise (CPX) typically focuses on the battle readiness of staffs such as a particular Unified Combatant Command or one of its components at any level. It may run in parallel with an FTX or its equivalent, or as a stand-alone event for headquarters staff only with heavy emphasis on simulated events.

Field

edit
 
British Army soldiers with a Covenanter tank during a World War II military exercise, 1942

Historical names for the field exercise, or the full-scale rehearsal of military maneuvers as practice for warfare in the military services of the British Commonwealth include "schemes", while those of the military services United States are known as Field Training Exercises (FTX), or, in the case of naval forces, Fleet Exercises (FLEETEX). In a field exercise or fleet exercise, the two sides in the simulated battle are typically called "red" (simulating the enemy forces) and "blue", to avoid naming a particular adversary.[5] This naming convention originates with the inventors of the table-top war-game (the "Kriegsspiel"), the Prussian Georg von Reisswitz; their army wore Prussian blue, so friendly forces were depicted by the color blue.

Multiple forces

edit
 
A joint naval exercise between the Indian Navy, United States Navy, Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force, and Royal Australian Navy in 2020

Several different armed forces of the same nation training together are described as having a joint exercise. Those involving forces of multiple nations are described as having a combined exercise or coalition exercise. These are called a bilateral exercise if based on security agreements between two nations, or a multilateral exercise if the agreement is between multiple nations.

Simulation

edit
 
Royal Artillery soldiers training in a virtually simulated area, 2015

Other types of exercise include the Tactical Exercise Without Troops (TEWT), also known as a sand table, map, cloth model, or computer simulation exercise. These allow commanders to manipulate models through possible scenarios in military planning. This is also called warfare simulation, or in some instances a virtual battlefield, and in the past has been described as "wargames". Such examples of modern military wargames include DARWARS, a serious game developed since 2003 by DARPA with BBN Technologies, a defense contractor which was involved in the development of packet switching, used for ARPANET, and which developed the first computer modem in 1963.

Military operations and training have included different scenarios a soldier might encounter with morals and different ethics. In one military operation soldiers are frequently asked to engage in combat, humanitarian, and stabilization roles. These increase the ambiguity of a role one may encounter and challenge of ethics. This will also lead the military personnel to have to make a difficult call in challenging circumstances.[6] Even in difficult situations and conditions, military personnel still has to follow rules and regulations such as: 1) when the right thing to do is not immediately clear; 2) when two or more important principles or values support different actions, and 3) when some harm will result, regardless of the actions taken (Defense Ethics Program, Department of National Defense, 2012). These simulations involve crude living conditions, sleep deprivations, time limit, and either lack or ambiguous amount of information.

A subset of simulated exercises is the Table Top Exercise (TTX), typically limited to senior personnel stepping through the decision-making processes they would employ in a crisis, a contingency, or general warfare.

History

edit
 
German pre-World War I military exercise Herbstmanöver in southern Germany, autumn 1909 (Emperor Wilhelm II second on the left)

The use of military exercises and war games can be found to date back to as early as the early 19th century, wherein it was the officers of the Prussian Army who created the contemporary, tactical form of wargames that have since been more widely used and developed by other military conglomerations throughout the world. Non-tactical forms of wargames have existed for much longer, however, in the forms of tabletop games such as chess and Go.[7]

The modern use of military exercises grew out of the military need to study warfare and to reenact old battles for learning purposes. During the age of Kabinettskriege (Cabinet wars), Frederick the Great, King of Prussia from 1740 to 1786, "put together his armies as a well-oiled clockwork mechanism whose components were robot-like warriors. No individual initiative was allowed to Frederick's soldiers; their only role was to cooperate in the creation of walls of projectiles through synchronized firepower."[8] This was in the pursuit of a more effective army, and such practices made it easier to look at war from a top-down perspective. Disciplined troops should respond predictably, allowing study to be confined to maneuvers and command.

Prussia's victory over the Second French Empire in the Franco-Prussian War (1870–71) is sometimes partly credited to the training of Prussian officers with the wargame Kriegsspiel, which was invented around 1811 and gained popularity with many officers in the Prussian army. These first wargames were played with dice which represented "friction", or the intrusion of less than ideal circumstances during a real war (including morale, meteorology, the fog of war, etc.).

21st century militaries still use wargames to simulate future wars and model their reaction. According to Manuel de Landa, after World War II the Command, Control and Communications (C3) was transferred from the military staff to the RAND Corporation, the first think tank. Around the mid to late 20th century, computer simulated war games were created to replace traditional war gaming methods with the goal of optimizing and speeding up the process and making it possible to analyze more complex scenarios with greater ease. In 1958, the Naval War college installed a computer war game system where their traditional war gaming activities were held. The system was called the Navy Electronic Warfare System, and cost over $10 million to install.[9] The change from traditional war gaming methods to electronic computer simulated ones meant that the value and accuracy of a war game simulation was less dependent on skill and individual experiences, and more dependent on quantitative data and complicated analysis methods.[10]

Von Neumann was employed by the RAND Corporation, and his game theory was used in wargames to model nuclear dissuasion during the Cold War. Thus, the U.S. nuclear strategy was defined using wargames, "SAM" representing the U.S. and "IVAN" representing the Soviet Union.

 
A wargame at the U.S. Marine Corps War College, 2019

Early game theory included only zero-sum games, which means that when one player won, the other automatically lost. The prisoner's dilemma, which models the situation of two prisoners in which each one is given the choice to betray or not the other, gave three alternatives to the game:

  • Neither prisoners betrays the other, and both are given short-term sentences
  • One prisoner betrays the other, and is freed, while the other gets a long sentence
  • Both prisoners betray each other, and both are given mid-sized sentences

This model gave the basis for the massive retaliation nuclear doctrine. The zero-sum fallacy and cooperative games would be theorized only later, while the evolution of nuclear technology and missiles made the massive retaliation nuclear strategy obsolete.[11]

List of military exercises

edit
 
M113 armoured personnel carriers passing civilian traffic in Herbstein, West Germany during Exercise Reforger 83

Current and recurring

edit
name host type invited
participant(s)
focus first
held
frequency
Anatolian Eagle Turkey multilateral aerial warfare 2001 no fixed schedule
AMAN Pakistan multilateral maritime security 2007 biannual
Balikatan Philippines bilateral combined arms 1991 annual
BALTOPS NATO multilateral naval warfare 1971 annual
Blue Flag Israel bilateral aerial warfare 2013 no fixed schedule
Bright Star Egypt bilateral combined arms 1980 biannual
CARAT United States bilateral ASEAN members naval warfare 1995 annual
Caucasus exercises Russia multilateral combined arms 2006 approx. every 4 years
Centre exercises Russia joint combined arms 2011 every 4 years
Cobra Gold Thailand multilateral combined arms, military simulation, humanitarian aid and disaster relief 1982 annual
Cold Response NATO (Norway) multilateral defence readiness 2006 biannual
Croix du Sud France multilateral humanitarian aid and disaster relief 2002 biannual
Dynamic Manta NATO multilateral naval warfare 2006 annual
Garuda Shield Indonesia multilateral combined arms, command post, humanitarian aid and disaster relief 2007 annual
Green Dagger United States multilateral infantry combat 2019 annual
Malabar India multilateral naval warfare, maritime security 1992 annual
Maple Flag Canada multilateral United Kingdom, United States aerial combat 1978 annual
Real Thaw Portugal multilateral aerial combat 2009 annual
Red Flag United States multilateral aerial combat 1975 triennial / biannual
Red Flag – Alaska United States multilateral aerial warfare 2006 triennial / quad-annual
Resolute Dragon Japan bilateral defence readiness, command and control 2021 annual
RIMPAC United States multilateral naval warfare 1971 biannual
Saif Sareea Oman bilateral United Kingdom combined arms 1986 no fixed schedule
Talisman Saber Australia bilateral United Kingdom, United States combined arms; combat readiness 2005 biannual
Varuna India bilateral naval warfare 1993 annual
Vostok Exercises Russia joint combat readiness; command and control 2010 every 4 years
Zapad Russia, Soviet Union joint varying focuses 1981 approx. every 4 years
name host type invited
participant(s)
focus first
held
frequency

Former, significant

edit
name host type invited
participant(s)
focus held frequency significance
Fleet problem United States joint naval warfare 1923–1941, 2014–2021 no fixed schedule bulk of U.S. Navy exercises in the interwar period until World War II
Carolina Maneuvers United States joint warfare strategy 1941 standalone involved approximately 350,000 soldiers
Louisiana Maneuvers United States joint warfare strategy 1941 standalone involved approximately 400,000 soldiers, including several officers who would become prominent military leaders during World War II
Reforger NATO (West Germany) multilateral West Germany, United Kingdom, United States combat readiness 1969–1988, 1990–1993 annual display of preparedness in the event of war between NATO and the Warsaw Pact
North China Military Exercise China joint unknown 1981 standalone involved over 114,000 soldiers; the largest Chinese military exercise up to that point
Able Archer NATO multilateral, command post combat readiness, nuclear warfare unknown annual Able Archer 83 was mistakenly perceived by the Soviet Union to be genuine NATO war preparations
Brasstacks India joint combined arms 1986–1987 standalone involved approximately 500,000 soldiers; the largest military exercise on the Indian subcontinent in history
Millennium Challenge United States simulation warfare strategy 2002 standalone restarted after Blueforce (representing the U.S.) was quickly defeated by Redforce (representing Iran or Iraq), with a new rule limiting Redforce's capabilities and favouring Blueforce, caused controversy when Blueforce won
Caucasus 2009 Russia joint combat readiness 2009 standalone conducted as a show of force against Georgia after the Russo-Georgian War
Union Resolve 2022 Russia bilateral combined arms, warfare strategy 2022 standalone a deception by Russia for mobilisation prior to the Russian invasion of Ukraine
2022 Chinese military exercises around Taiwan China, Taiwan joint (not involving Taiwan) naval warfare; combined arms 2022 standalone conducted as a show of force against the U.S. to deter American influence in Taiwan, shortly after U.S. Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi's visit to Taiwan
name host type invited
participant(s)
focus held frequency significance

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Perla, Peter P. (1987). "War Games, Analyses, and Exercises". Naval War College Review. 40 (2): 44–52. ISSN 0028-1484. JSTOR 44636822.
  2. ^ Rubel, Robert C. (2006). "The Epistemology of War Gaming". Naval War College Review. 59 (2): 108–128. ISSN 0028-1484. JSTOR 26396724.
  3. ^ "Why Russia and China's joint military exercises should worry the West". The Economist. Retrieved 13 September 2018.
  4. ^ Kuo, Raymond; Blankenship, Brian Dylan (2021). "Deterrence and Restraint: Do Joint Military Exercises Escalate Conflict?". Journal of Conflict Resolution. 66: 3–31. doi:10.1177/00220027211023147. ISSN 0022-0027. S2CID 237734258.
  5. ^ "United States Military Exercises". Archived from the original on 17 November 2015. Retrieved 15 November 2015.
  6. ^ Thompson, Megan M.; Jetly, Rakesh (1 August 2014). "Battlefield ethics training: integrating ethical scenarios in high-intensity military field exercises". European Journal of Psychotraumatology. 5 (s2): 23668. doi:10.3402/ejpt.v5.23668. ISSN 2000-8198. PMC 4138704. PMID 25206947.
  7. ^ Glick, Stephen P.; Charters, L. Ian (1983). "War, Games, and Military History". Journal of Contemporary History. 18 (4): 567–582. ISSN 0022-0094. JSTOR 260304.
  8. ^ Manuel de Landa, War in the Age of Intelligent Machines, p. 127, Swerve Editions, New York, 1991
  9. ^ Derian, James Der (1990). "The Simulation Syndrome: From War Games to Game Wars". Social Text (24): 187–192. doi:10.2307/827835. ISSN 0164-2472. JSTOR 827835.
  10. ^ Ghamari-Tabrizi, Sharon (2000). "Simulating the Unthinkable: Gaming Future War in the 1950s and 1960s". Social Studies of Science. 30 (2): 163–223. doi:10.1177/030631200030002001. ISSN 0306-3127. JSTOR 285834. S2CID 143079407.
  11. ^ Concerning the use of military wargames, see Manuel de Landa, War in the Age of Intelligent Machines
edit