Grand Strategy

Grand strategy is military strategy considered at the level of the movement and use of an entire nation state or empire's resources. Issues of grand strategy typically include the choice of primary versus secondary theatres in war, the general types of armaments to favor manufacturing, and which international alliances best suit national goals. It has considerable overlap with foreign policy, but is focussed primarily on the military implications of policy. Grand strategy is typically decided by the political leadership of a country, with input from the most senior military officials. Because of its scope and the number of different people and groups involved, grand strategy is usually a matter of public record, although the details of implementation (such as the immediate purposes of a specific alliance) are often concealed. A grand strategy may extend across many years or even multiple generations.

Examples

A classic example of modern grand strategy is the decision of the Allies in World War II to concentrate on the defeat of Germany first. The decision, a joint agreement made after the attack on Pearl Harbor had drawn the US into the war, was a sensible one in that Germany was the most powerful member of the Axis, and directly threatened the continued existence of both the United Kingdom and the Soviet Union. Conversely, while Japan's conquests garnered considerable public attention, they were mostly in colonial areas deemed less essential by planners and policymakers. The specifics of Allied military strategy in the Pacific War was therefore shaped by the lesser resources made available to the theatre commanders. A more recent example of grand strategy was the policy of containment used by the US during the Cold War. An example of grand strategy incorporating both military and economic elements was the decision by the Chinese leadership in the early 1980s to reduce the size of the People's Liberation Army so that more resources could be used by the civilian economy on the premise that a growing civilian economy would be able to support a larger military in the future.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
baalah
summer isles
list of sniper rifles
daboecia
bunita marcus
jabneel
hoel iii, duke of brittany
eudes, viscount of porhoet
richard rodney bennett
battle of kinston
vementry
conan iv, duke of brittany
nervin
vaila
goinia accident
that's life! (television)
neuse river
cenarth
shicron
stephen dodgson
fork (topology)
cilgerran
guy, duke of brittany
dromaeosauridae
esther rantzen
dura mater
joseph smith iii
caernarfon bay
alix of thouars
giancarlo fisichella
republikani miroslava sladka
pravastatin
conwy bay
deductible
southwestern christian college
st catherine's island
danish peoples party
borna virus
segnosaurus
mainland finland
rova saxophone quartet
bibliography of work on objectivism
gateshead (borough)
pure guava