Information Warfare: Principles and Operations
Author: Edward L Waltz
Here's a systems engineering-level introduction to the growing field of Information Warfare (IW) the battlefield where information is both target and weapon. This comprehensive book provides engineers, system operators, and information technology users with an understandable overview of rapidly emerging threats to commercial, civil, and military information systems and shows how these threats can be identified and systems protected.
Authored by a leading expert in advanced information-based technologies, this is the first book to detail the component principles, technologies, and tactics critical to success in the three key areas of IW: Information Dominance, Information Defense, and Information Offense. The author explains the quantification of information, describes the deductive, inductive and abductive processes that create knowledge, and provides essential technical background on:
• The knowledge creation processes of data fusion and data mining
• Information security technologies, including: encryption, authentication, authorization, and attack detection
• Information attack technologies, including: physical, infrastructure, and perceptual methods
Adding to the book's value are extensive citations to relevant unclassified literature, numerous examples of practical defense-related systems, clear explanations of basic IW theory, and much deeper and broader coverage of security issues than found in typical Internet security books.
Booknews
Presents the author's conception of the use of information in warfare, based on seminars that he has presented in the US and Europe since 1995. Topics include the role of technology in information-based warfare, information superiority through dominant battlespace awareness and knowledge, information warfare policy, the weapons of information warfare, cryptographic encryption measures, and physical-level system security. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.
Table of Contents:
Preface | ||
1 | Concepts of Information in Warfare | 1 |
2 | The Role of Information Science in Warfare | 49 |
3 | The Role of Technology in Information-Based Warfare | 83 |
4 | Achieving Information Superiority Through Dominant Battlespace Awareness and Knowledge | 107 |
5 | Information Warfare Policy, Strategy, and Operations | 139 |
6 | The Elements of Information Operations | 171 |
7 | An Operational Concept (CONOPS) for Information Operations | 229 |
8 | Offensive Information Operations | 251 |
9 | Defensive Information Operations | 301 |
10 | The Technologies of Information Warfare | 357 |
About the Author | 383 | |
Index | 385 |
New interesting book: The Many Faces of Alexander Hamilton or Seven Fires
Peace Time: Cease-Fire Agreements and the Durability of Peace
Author: Virginia Page Fortna
Why do cease-fire agreements sometimes last for years while others flounder barely long enough to be announced? How to maintain peace in the aftermath of war is arguably one of the most important questions of the post--Cold War era. And yet it is one of the least explored issues in the study of war and peace. Here, Page Fortna offers the first comprehensive analysis of why cease-fires between states succeed or fail. She develops cooperation theory to argue that mechanisms within these agreements can help maintain peace by altering the incentives for war and peace, reducing uncertainty, and helping to prevent or manage accidents that could lead to war.
To test this theory, the book first explores factors, such as decisive victory and prior history of conflict, that affect the baseline prospects for peace. It then considers whether stronger cease-fires are likely to be implemented in the hardest or the easiest cases. Next, through both quantitative and qualitative testing of the effects of cease-fire agreements, firm evidence emerges that agreements do matter. Durable peace is harder to achieve after some wars than others, but when most difficult, states usually invest more in peace building. These efforts work. Strong agreements markedly lessen the risk of further war. Mechanisms such as demilitarized zones, dispute resolution commissions, peacekeeping, and external guarantees can help maintain peace between even the deadliest of foes.
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