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Military doctrine : ウィキペディア英語版
Military doctrine

Military doctrine is the expression of how military forces contribute to campaigns, major operations, battles, and engagements.
It is a guide to action, rather than hard and fast rules. Doctrine provides a common frame of reference across the military. It helps standardize operations, facilitating readiness by establishing common ways of accomplishing military tasks.
Doctrine links theory, history, experimentation, and practice. Its objective is to foster initiative and creative thinking. Doctrine provides the military with an authoritative body of statements on how military forces conduct operations and provides a common lexicon for use by military planners and leaders.
==Defining doctrine==

NATO's definition of doctrine, used unaltered by many member nations, is:
"''Fundamental principles by which the military forces guide their actions in support of objectives. It is authoritative but requires judgement in application''".〔AAP-6(V) NATO Glossary of Terms and Definitions〕
The Canadian Army states:
''"Military doctrine is a formal expression of military knowledge and thought, that the army accepts as being relevant at a given time, which covers the nature of conflict, the preparation of the army for conflict, and the method of engaging in conflict to achieve success ... it is descriptive rather than prescriptive, requiring judgement in application. It does not establish dogma or provide a checklist of procedures, but is rather an authoritative guide, describing how the army thinks about fighting, not how to fight. As such it attempts to be definitive enough to guide military activity, yet versatile enough to accommodate a wide variety of situations."''〔Canada Department of National Defence. ''The Conduct of Land Operations'' B-GL-300-001/FP-000, 1998: iv–v.〕

A U.S. Air Force Air University staff study in 1948 defined military doctrine functionally as "those concepts, principles, policies, tactics, techniques, practices, and procedures which are essential to efficiency in organizing, training, equipping, and employing its tactical and service units."〔Evaluation Division, Air University. "To Analyze the USAF Publications System for Producing Manuals", staff study, 13 July 1948, quoted in Futrell, Robert Frank. ''Ideas, Concepts, Doctrine: Basic Thinking in the United States Air Force'', 1907–1960. December 1989, Air University Press〕
Gary Sheffield, of the Defence Studies Department of King's College London/JSCSC quoted J F C Fuller's 1923 definition of doctrine as the "central idea of an army".〔Gary Sheffield, 'Doctrine & Command in the British Army, A Historical Overview,' Army Doctrine Publication Land Operations, DGD&D, British Army, May 2005, p. 165〕
The Soviet ''Dictionary of Basic Military Terms'' defined military doctrine as "a state's officially accepted system of scientifically founded views on the nature of modern wars and the use of the armed forces in them. ... Military doctrine has two aspects: social-political and military-technical."〔Moscow: Voenizdat, 1965, quoted in William Odom, "Soviet Military Doctrine," ''Foreign Affairs'', Winter 1988/89〕 The social-political side "encompasses all questions concerning methodology, economic, and social bases, the political goals of war. It is the defining and the more stable side." The other side, the military-technical, must accord with the political goals. It includes the "creation of military structure, technical equipping of the armed forces, their training, definition of forms and means of conducting operations and war as a whole."〔A. Beleyev, "The Military-Theoretical Heritage of M. V. Frunze," ''Krasnaya Zvezda'' (Red Star), November 4, 1984, quoted in William Odom's article in ''Foreign Affairs'', Winter 1988/89〕
''See also'': Allied Joint Publication ((AJP)-01(D) ) edition(delta)issued-21 December 2010. (NATO's capstone doctrine)

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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