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Information Operations―Doctrine and Practice: A Reference Handbook

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A no-nonsense treatment of information operations, this handbook makes clear what does and does not fall under information operations, how the military plans and executes such efforts, and what the role of IO ought to be in the war of ideas. Paul provides detailed accounts of the doctrine and practice of the five core information operations capabilities (psychological operations, military deception, operations security, electronic warfare, and computer network operations) and the three related capabilities (public affairs, civil-military operations, and military support to public diplomacy). The discussion of each capability includes historical examples, explanations of tools and forces available, and current challenges faced by that community. An appendix of selected excerpts from military doctrine ties the work firmly to the military theory behind information operations.

Paul argues that contemporary IO's mixing of capabilities focused on information content with those focused on information systems conflates apples with the apple carts. This important study concludes that information operations would be better poised to contribute to the war of ideas if IO were reorganized, separating content capabilities from systems capabilities and separating the employment of black (deceptive or falsely attributed) information from white (wholly truthful and correctly attributed) information.

192 pages, Hardcover

First published March 30, 2008

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Christopher Paul

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13 reviews1 follower
May 5, 2018
I read this to prepare for my Information Warfare board for the Navy. I had a lot of trouble studying for my board as I cannot learn from merely memorizing isolated facts. I need context and big picture in order to fully understand concepts. This book made Information Operations remarkably clear for me. It was well worth the cost.
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