
April 22, 2021
3:30 pm
-
5:00 pm
Zoom
Add to Calendar
2021-04-22 15:30:00
2021-04-22 17:00:00
The Dragons and the Snakes: How the "Rest" Challenged the United States after 9/11
After the Cold War, the United States became the apex predator in a global military ecosystem defined by overwhelming U.S. dominance in one particular, narrowly-defined, high-tech precision-based form of warfare that we have come to call "conventional." In the two decades since then, our adversaries--both states and non-state actors--have adapted, evolving new techniques, applying advanced technologies, and copying and learning from one another. Professor Kilcullen will describe, through a series of case studies based on his 2020 book The Dragon and the Snakes, how this has occurred and what it might mean for U.S. strategy and defense policy going forward.
Zoom
OSU ASC Drupal 8
ascwebservices@osu.edu
America/New_York
public
Date Range
2021-04-22 15:30:00
2021-04-22 17:00:00
The Dragons and the Snakes: How the "Rest" Challenged the United States after 9/11
After the Cold War, the United States became the apex predator in a global military ecosystem defined by overwhelming U.S. dominance in one particular, narrowly-defined, high-tech precision-based form of warfare that we have come to call "conventional." In the two decades since then, our adversaries--both states and non-state actors--have adapted, evolving new techniques, applying advanced technologies, and copying and learning from one another. Professor Kilcullen will describe, through a series of case studies based on his 2020 book The Dragon and the Snakes, how this has occurred and what it might mean for U.S. strategy and defense policy going forward.
Zoom
America/New_York
public
After the Cold War, the United States became the apex predator in a global military ecosystem defined by overwhelming U.S. dominance in one particular, narrowly-defined, high-tech precision-based form of warfare that we have come to call "conventional." In the two decades since then, our adversaries--both states and non-state actors--have adapted, evolving new techniques, applying advanced technologies, and copying and learning from one another. Professor Kilcullen will describe, through a series of case studies based on his 2020 book The Dragon and the Snakes, how this has occurred and what it might mean for U.S. strategy and defense policy going forward.