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NATO After the End of the Cold War

Reviewed - Review

Jan Eichler

Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 2/2021, Vol. XXX. (LXII.): 3-25

The article analyses the process of the NATO enlargement after 1990. It starts by a detailed analysis of the secret negotiations which have been started just after the end of the Cold War. In the light of the institutional liberalism, the NATO enlargement is a positive process which satisfied especially new member states. But in the light of the American neorealism, this process resulted into profound changes in the balance of the security threats and into a large militarisation and tension at the new Eastern frontier of NATO in a direct neighbourhood with the Russia. New military units with the modern arms systems are deployed over there and we are witnessing a growing number of dangerous military incidents. As a result, the contemporary situation needs new political negotiations between two competitors and a shift from the contemporary negative Peace towards the positive Peace.

Hybrid Warfare - Cases of Croatia and Ukraine

Reviewed - Review

gen. plk. Dr. Slavko Barić, plk. Dr. Jugoslav Jozić, pplk. Dr. Robert Barić, MSc.

Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. MC/2016, Vol. XXV. (LVII.): 104-123

Despite the attempts of labeling hybrid warfare as a new form of warfare or even as a factor that is changing the nature of war, hybrid warfare is part of a war from the Antiquity to the present day. The essence of hybrid warfare is in parallel use of regular and irregular military forcesand different means of pressure by a power unwilling to openly attack a weaker opponent. Information dimension is analyzed in the cases of hybrid warfare against Croatia (1990-91) and Ukraine (2014). In both cases the key target of hybrid warfare was social cohesion of the attacked countries. In the Croatian case, despite a strong propaganda campaign followed by the direct and indirect use of military force, the attacking side was unable to break social cohesion of the majority of Croatia's population. In the Ukrainian case, the lack of social cohesion has prevented organization of the efficient response to hybrid warfare waged by the Russian Federation. Both cases also indicate the significance of national identity in preserving a society's social cohesion.

NATO Common Funding - Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow

Nonreviewed - Other

Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 3/2017, Vol. XXVI. (LVIII.): 78-90

The NATO common funding has already been used to finance common needs of the Alliance for 65 years and has contributed substantially to its readiness, cohesion and solidarity. A number of reform measures have been approved, and in most cases already implemented, over the period of last several years with the aim of more effective, economical, efficient a transparent use of NATO common funds and the introduction of modern financial management practices. NATO common funding is therefore a live and well-functioning system. Nevertheless, there is still a room for further improvements. The aim of this article is to describe the role of NATO common funding, its basic parameters and tools, its development in the past, and current and future challenges.

Neorealism and Contemporary US-Russian Military Competition in the Post-Soviet Space

Reviewed - Review

Jan Eichler

Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 2/2017, Vol. XXVI. (LVIII.): 89-105

In the light of neorealist theory, the Eastern enlargement of NATO satisfies basic feature of expansion: 9 former countries of the Warsaw Pact become members of NATO. USA as a Sea power reinforced its superiority at the detriment of the RF as a continental power. The annexation of Crimea, as a Russian answer, had intensified security fears of post - Soviet countries and of Poland and enlarged the space for external balancing of the USA. Author warns that a confrontational structure had become typical for the area or the Western part of the Post - Soviet space. It increases the number of military incidents, and, even, the threat of a direct military confrontation including a Russian use of tactical nuclear arms, being inspired by the Rogers plan from 1980´s.

Strategic Documents of the Czech Republic and Ministry of Defence Acquisitions

Reviewed - Review

Ing. Antonín Novotný, Ph.D.

Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 3/2016, Vol. XXV. (LVII.): 21-32

This article aims to reflect a digression into the history of selected strategic documents, which processed the Ministry of Defence or was in the processing involved - in connection to the planning of acquisitions. The ambition of the article is not a comprehensive evaluation process, but only the selected aspects. After many years of decreasing Czech defence budget, is here the opposite situation. In connection with the new situation it is necessary to rethink the current approach to this topic; to ensure maximal security of the Czech Republic and in a figurative sense NATO and the European Union also. The fact, that the Czech strategy document was among the best in the EU, does not mean that defence spending is automatically efficient.

Arming Georgia in the Context of its Efforts to Join NATO

Reviewed - Review

Mgr. Lukáš Dyčka, Pavel Faus

Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 4/2016, Vol. XXV. (LVII.): 74-85

This text focuses on process of armament policy of the Armed Forces of Georgia and how it was influenced by country's effort to join NATO. Authors argue that Georgia's proclaimed pro-western ambitions should have also been reflected in the process of materiel procurement. Authors investigate the time period from 2003 to 2008 when growing military expenditures reached it's top. Text shows that only few major acquisitions in that period were focused on western military equipment and that Georgia's military acquisitions did not reflect countrys inclination towards west and NATO.

NATO and Energy Security

Nonreviewed - Other

Ing. René Nastoupil, CSc.

Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 3/2014, Vol. XXIII. (LV.): 31-43

The article deals with the reasons why NATO is interested in energy security and main tasks which Alliance fulfils in this area. A special attention is paid to the energy dependence of the European member states of the Alliance, the increase of awareness about energy security, critical energy infrastructure protection and energy efficiency in the armed forces. The author elaborates the implementation of the energy security issues into the Alliance main activities, education and training in the field of energy security and cooperation with partner countries, other international organizations and private sector.

The article is available only in the Czech language. For more information please contact editors.

The Czechoslovak Independent Brigade of Jan Žižka in Yugoslavia - Neglected Component of Anti-fascist Resistance

Nonreviewed - Other

Ing. Pavel Zona, Ph.D.

Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 2/2014, Vol. XXIII. (LV.): 146-153

During the Second World War, the Czechs and the Slovaks joined anti-fascist resistance on many fronts. The battlefield in the former Yugoslavia was in terms of numbers of combatants third most important. The relationship of politicians, historians and media, to various components of our resistance reflected changes in the political orientation of Czechoslovakia, or the Czech Republic. The share of the Czechs and the Slovaks, settled in Slavonia, in the liberation of Yugoslavia and the defeat of Germany was always "politically" complicated. But nobody can dispute its importance and scope, heroism of members the National Liberation Army of Yugoslavia, natives of Bohemia, Moravia and Slovakia. In October 2013, we marked the seventieth anniversary of this unit.

The Present State of Accoutrement Supplies and Clothing for ACR Service Members

Nonreviewed - Review

Kpt. Ing. Michal Zelenák, doc. Ing. Miroslav Pecina, CSc.

Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 3/2013, Vol. XXII. (LIV.): 102-113

This article is primarily engaged in the analysis of existing situation in the area of securing outfit components and in the assessment of the level of support provided to women and men working in the Czech Army. It evaluates the current state of supplying the soldiers with all necessary outfits in compliance with the current legislation and the way of its actual implementation. It analyses the current legislation and the possibilities of distribution of uniforms to their end users. The assessment primarily addresses the fulfilment of objectives for which the distribution system of uniforms was established.

NATO Common Funding as a Tool for Cohesion Enhancement and Ability to Act

Military art

Ing. Josef Procházka, Ph.D.

Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 4/2012, Vol. XXI. (LIII.): 25-34

In the past, the Common Funding played only marginal role in the NATO strategic decision-making. However, this situation changed significantly when the global economic crisis challenged the national public expenditures and NATO defence policy became a matter of serious reflections. NATO should balance its requirements with limited resources and adjust its future activities within shrinking budgets. NATO must make hard decisions and implement reforms in order to ensure its ability to fulfil its mission and priority tasks in the long run. The reconfiguration of Common Funding is an inherent part of this process. The aim of this article is to introduce Common Funding as a management-supporting tool of the international organisation under currently mounting resource constrains.

The Czech Republic and Its Participation in European Military Transport Organizations

Informational pages

pplk. Ing. Martin Rejzek, Ph.D., pplk. Ing. Luděk Hradecký

Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 1/2011, Vol. XX. (LII.): 83-93

The NATO Washington Summit in 1999 discussed Defence Capability Initiatives to increase Alliance defence potential together with capacities for accelerated deployability and mobility of NATO forces. This fact was underlined during Prague Summit 2002. One of Prague Capabilities Commitments is the requirement of deployability and sustainability in operations. Among others, this requirement is met by Memorandum of Understanding and bilateral agreements. The Czech Republic is involved in activities of international organizations, enumerated in this article. We support a principle of specialization, the concentration to limited, part-time scale of transport capacities operating for Czech peacekeeping missions. Active participation in the Movement Coordination Centre Europe could be the leading pattern for synergic cooperation in the field of strategic transport.

The Development of Security Policy and Strategy of the Czech Republic 1990-2009

Reviewed

Ing. Vladimír Karaffa, CSc., PhDr. Miloš Balabán Ph.D., PhDr. Antonín Rašek

Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 4/2009, Vol. XVIII. (L.): 5-22

This study is based on a paper presented at the conference with the same heading taking place on January 8, 2009. First, the authors enumerate starting points of Czech defence and security polity together with key factors influencing their developments. The whole scale of new threats-from WMD and ballistic proliferation to cyber attack and even non intentional threats like climate change and pandemia-are to be addressed not only in NATO but also in the EU. Existing states of affairs are gradually reflected by Czech security and defence documents: Security Strategy 1999, 2001, 2003; Military Strategy 1999, 2002, 2004, 2008. In this historical context we joined NATO defence alliance and took part in peacekeeping missions abroad. Previous twenty years when we lived in peace could be regarded as a challenge to build Czech statehood. There is no time like a present. Only the future will show us whether we mastered it as much as we could.

EU Battle Groups' Deployability in ESDP Operations

Military art

Ing. Jaroslav Kulíšek

Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 1/2009, Vol. XVIII. (L.): 31-58

Factors such as distance, destination, deployment demands, duration, represent key elements to determine logistics requirements. The EU BG concept necessitates considerable strategic air/sea lift and combat support capabilities, since EU battle groups are to be able to be deployed almost anywhere in the world, primarily in Africa. They have to deploy both troops and materiel simultaneously to its mission areas. Strategic airlift is the fastest way of deploying troops over long distance. The main challenge for the EU is therefore availability giant airplanes. A lack of suitable European transport crafts in EBalabáuropean airlift fleet is the Achilles heel to the EU BG Concept. The problem is that all aircraft available have only limited payload capacities and flying range. Although deploying by sea is more time consuming than deploying by air, EU member states have more ships available for strategic sea transport. The strict deployment deadline set down in the EU BG Concept means that ships and crews will have to be held at very high readiness.

Security Activities in Today's Word (Geopolitical Starting Points)

Reviewed - Research

Doc. dr. Štefan Volner, CSc.

Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 2/2006, Vol. XV. (XLVII.): 15-21

The world is full of unsolvable problems. Every key problem has turned now into multinational one; in fact, this can be handled only if it becomes a transnational problem. Security development is multifaceted process tied with the whole globe. The author recapitulates several models or paradigms that influenced a lot our global strategical thinking. The Grand Chessboard: American Primacy and Its Geostrategic Imperatives by Zbigniew Brzezinski; The Choice: The Global Domination or Global Leadership of by the same author; The Clash of Civilizations by Samuel P. Huntington; Avin Toffler's The Third Wave; Kauffman's Fourth Law: Prolegomenon to General Biology (Investigations); Order Out of Chaos by I. Prigogine and I. Stengers. Dr. Volner says that the contemporary humankind has its last chance to push such a solution that might lead us out the world of dangers and threats to start building up a balanced and lasting security, but he warns against waging "small preventive wars", as the only way to safeguard the peace.

Wars of the so-called Post-Confrontation Period: Successes, Paradoxes, Challenges

Military art

Doc. PhDr. Jan Eichler, CSc.

Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 2/2006, Vol. XV. (XLVII.): 40-51

Even after the Cold War, our world is full of local and international conflicts. There were dozens of wars, fringe clashes between local opposing groups in Africa, Asia and so on. Among them there were four wars of lager size, with more than thousands of deaths in each of them that could be characterized as international wars: Desert Storm 1991, Iraqi Freedom 2003, Allied Strength 1999, and Enduring Freedom 2001. Now we can look at them from a distance ...217 Problems tied with those large-scale wars have several levels: supranational (international) level and military level, being accompanied by paradoxes: international and political paradoxes and military ones. This influenced structures and methods of training and preparation of Australian, Britain and US forces. The lessons were embedded into their military concepts, rules and regulations, e.g. Complex Warfighting (Australia), Future Land Operating Concept (UK), Field Manual: Interim Counterinsurgency Operations (US). New roles of military forces, global and local implications, ought to be embedded also into the structures and concepts of the Army of the Czech Republic, concludes the author.

System katalogizace CR a katalogizace vyrobku

Doc. Ing. Jozef Šmondrk, Ph.D.

Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 1/2004, Vol. XIII. (XLV.): 20-33

Jake otazky otevrela valka v Iraku

Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 2/2003, Vol. XII. (XLIV.): 64-69

Regionalni bezpecnost a Rakousko

Dr. Antonín Svěrák

Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 1/2003, Vol. XII. (XLIV.): 116-120

Bezpecnostni politika Ceske republiky
pri vstupu do Evropske unie

PhDr. Antonín Rašek

Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 2/2002, Vol. XI. (XLIII.): 3-23

Zahranicni intervence a separatisticke konflikty v Evrope v devadesatych letech

Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 2/2000, Vol. IX. (XLI.): 154-173

Ceske ozbrojene sily po roce 1990 v zahranici

Generálmajor Ing. Petr Voznica, CSc., podplukovník Ing. Miroslav Žirovnický

Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 2/2001, Vol. X. (XLII.): 101-104

Spojenecke spolecne operace

Plukovník doc. Ing. Petr Němec, CSc.

Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 3/2000, Vol. IX. (XLI.): 45-76

Evropska bezpecnostni a obranna identita:Quo vadis?

Generálmajo Ing. Jaroslav Hudec

Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 3/2000, Vol. IX. (XLI.): 12-18

Strategicka koncepce stability a bezpecnosti pro 21. stoleti a pozadavky na obranny prumysl

Doc. Ing. Jiří Strnádek, CSc.

Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 4/1999, Vol. VIII. (XL.): 18-26

Dedictvi Kosova a budoucnost NATO

Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 4/1999, Vol. VIII. (XL.): 143-147

Skryta nebezpeci

Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 1/1998, Vol. VII. (XXXIX.): 141-144

Zkusenosti Armady CR v oblasti spolecnych cviceni a mirovy operaci

Pplk. Dr. Lubomír Žumár

Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 4/1998, Vol. VII. (XXXIX.): 18-24

Mirove operace

Pplk. Ing. Adolf Turek

Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 4/1997, Vol. VI. (XXXVIII.): 66-74

Evropska bezpecnostni struktura:
Nadbytek organizaci?

Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 1/1996, Vol. V. (XXXVII.): 131-138

Sympozium KBSE

Pplk. Ing. Josef Janošec, CSc.

Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 1/1995, Vol. IV. (XXXVI.): 105-109

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