The Embedded Military: Why did the IDF Perform Effectively in Executing the Disengagement Plan (original) (raw)
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This essay examines the idea of " Non-lethal warfare " and how it can and should be integrated in the framework of the IDF's military campaigns. It addresses the organizational, conceptual, and cultural barriers obstructing such a policy, and the changes required in the IDF's operating principles: establishing the guidelines; changing the concept of time in a military operational design; shifting from a structure of covert to overt campaigns that are connected to the civilian environment; and devising a supportive intelligence and operational mechanism. In practical terms, the way to promote " Non-lethal warfare " in the IDF requires focusing on four relative advantages: technological innovation; Israel's relationship with the United States and other strategic partners; utilization of the compact size of the defense establishment; and reliance on acquiring civilian know-how through the reserve system, or creating other mechanisms enabling know-how and " soft " capabilities acquirement.
The Buildup of Forces for IDF Underground Warfare
The Jerusalem Institue for Strategy and Security, 2019
Israel’s successful response to the underground threat has significantly limited the strategic abilities of its enemies, just as Israel has severely hampered the efficiency and purposefulness of rocket launches by terrorist organizations. This affords Israel room to maneuver if and when it decides to launch a wide-scale military operation in the Gaza Strip or Lebanon.
Since its establishment in 1948, the efforts of the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) have focused greatly on making use of technological developments, the idea being to increase the gap in quality between the IDF and the armies of the Arab states, thus creating a deterrence effect. Furthermore, should this effect not have been realized, the advantage of the IDF over the Arab armies would enable it to defeat them. Within this framework, the IDF assimilated and developed important components, such as command, control, communication, computer systems (C4), and military intelligence, generally referred to as "combat multipliers." These technological improvements were tremendously cost-effective and had a definitive and positive effect on the IDF's functioning, to the point that they created Israeli military superiority in the battlefield.