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Shared Values of Organization and their Influence on Efficiency and EffectivenessNonreviewed - ResearchIng. Eva Vincencová, prap. Kateřina StrnadováVojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 3/2006, Vol. XV. (XLVII.): 208-221 Thispaperdealswiththeareaof organization values or to say it better, by organisation culture, including its importance for overall efficiency and effectivity. It is a set of values, norms, beliefs, attitudes, assumptions. The authoresses explain those terms, cite their definitions. They underline the fact that highly motivated servicemen are the real assets for our forces. We have to do our best to recruit them, to set up such quality of military life, so that they would like to serve for longer periods. |
Vyzbrojovani ozbrojenych sil vybranych evropskych zemi - vyvoj a perspektivykpt. Ing. Jan ValouchVojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 3/2004, Vol. XIII. (XLV.): 66-78 |
Small Wars Revisited (Fourth Generation Warfare)Military artIng. Josef NastoupilVojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 4/2006, Vol. XV. (XLVII.): 34-40 This new generation war could be characterized by an emphasis on nonstate actors, by political and psychological forms of attacks that directly influence opponents. Other characteristics are as follows: extensive refugee flows, violence, transnational criminal aspects. Several factors will impact the nature, frequency and character of "small wars" in the 21st century. Failed/failing states, urbanization, diffusion of actors, communications technology, technological diffusion, religion, and ultra-terrorism. Clausewitz's fundamental appreciation for the primacy of political objectives as the guiding object in war remains relevant to "small wars" as does to interstate conflicts. The problem for today's strategist or policy maker is determining exactly what has changed, how the various means of stratecraft need to be adapted to the specific contingency at hand (according to The Journal of Strategic Studies, 6/2005). |
V planovani a rozpoctovani v rezortu MO se neda improvizovat!Ing. Jiří DušekVojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 2/2005, Vol. XIV. (XLVI.): 53-58 |
Operacni principy realizovane v prubehu rizeni operace "POVODEN 2002"Brigádní generál Ing. Jiří HalaškaVojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 3/2004, Vol. XIII. (XLV.): 3-15 |
Technology and Products Necessary for the Fight in Urbanized Territory (Urban Warfare Needs New Technology and Materials)Military artDoc. Ing. Dušan Sabolčík, CSc.Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 2/2006, Vol. XV. (XLVII.): 52-60 Established methods of warfare are out of use in urbanized regions, western technological and arms potential must be amended by new equipments, materials and weapons of XXIst Century WarriorCity Guerrilla Fighter. Urbanized areas are divided into separated sectors with changed dimensions: dominating tall buildings, impenetrable barriers. Reinforced concrete, narrow streets, fight inside buildings prevent us from using global position systems. So, dismounted infantry are being equipped by inertial movement units, portable lasers, noctovisors, and bolometers (i.e. instruments used to measure tiny amounts of radiant energy). Bolometers in combination with low light level videos enable to identify friends of foes, to set risky targets. The socalled reconnaissance hand grenade to get image and sounds of enemy soldiers are being developed, it is anticipated the wide employment of unmanned aerial and ground vehicles. Many arrangements are done to prevent "collateral damages", unintentional killing of civilians as a result of military action. |
Colonel in memoriam Jakub KoutnýPersonal dataPhDr. Zdeněk VališVojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 1/2006, Vol. XV. (XLVII.): 163-171 Mr. Koutný belonged among those who went through the fire of World War II and lately became victims of despotism of the so-called "class laws". In fact, Col. Koutný was not a soldier, but the journalist. At the beginning of war, Mr. Koutný was sent to Poland to inform about Polish practices to return Czechoslovak refugees back to the "Protectorate Bohemia and Moravia". At Poland he joined the Czechoslovak Military Group; lately he experienced Soviet labour camps. In a small city of Buzuluk, where the first Czechoslovak Field Battalion was formed, he became the chief of recruiting commission. There he met people returning from the NKVD's camps (i.e. Soviet Secret Police's detention camps). Many his reports to the Chief of Czechoslovak Military Mission Heliodor Pika were preserved in archives. Nowadays they bear witness on those fearful camps. As a press officer he laid down the foundation of the Czech army daily "Our Army in the USSR". He worked at the Czechoslovak Headquarters in Russia, as a liaison officer at the Command of the 1st Czechoslovak Army Corps in the USSR, as a political and military advisor to the commander of armour brigade Lt.Col. Janko. In his liberated country he helped to establish the military publishing house Our Army (Naše vojsko). Shortly after the communist coup d'etat, in 1949, he was imprisoned. He died in a communist jail in 1960. |
Reforma ruske obranyVojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 4/2005, Vol. XIV. (XLVI.): 113-119 |
Zpravodajske sluzby pri tvorbe a realizaci bezpecnostni politikyPhDr. Jan DuchekVojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 1/2005, Vol. XIV. (XLVI.): 41-58 |
Bezpecnostni hrozby a rizika spojene s rezimem Saddama Husajna a s jeho vojenskym svrzenimPhDr. Jan Eichler, CSc.Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 3/2003, Vol. XII. (XLIV.): 15-28 |
Guerrilla and InternetInformational pagesVojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 2/2006, Vol. XV. (XLVII.): 98-99 In essence, the world is organizing itself in a series of interconnected networks. The information revolution will cause shifts, both in how societies may come into conflict and how their armed forces may wage war. Cyber war is coming. Its concept refers to information-related conflict both at a grand level, between nations or societies, and at low levels of international subgroups, e.g. terrorists of any kind, e.g. Al Qaeda, etc. The concept may involve public diplomacy measures, political and cultural subversion, deception or interference with local media, infiltration of computer networks and databases, and efforts to promote dissident or opposition movements across computer networks. Terrorists may build mutual connections, shape opinions in target groups, and conduct intense propaganda and psychological operations campaigns. Guerrilla warfare in cyberspace can use those networks to maximize their political, economic, and social power while minimizing the military aspects until the final offensive. The source: T. Hammes, Jane's Defence Weekly, 5/2005 (nas). |
Reforma verejnych rozpoctu a hospodareni ACRDoc. Ing. Jiří Strnádek, CSc.Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 3/2004, Vol. XIII. (XLV.): 16-27 |
Assessment of Exercise Waste by Means of Hazard Impact IndexMilitary professionalNadporučík Ing. David Řehák, Ph.D., plukovník prof. Ing. Aleš Komár, CSc.Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 4/2006, Vol. XV. (XLVII.): 133-135 Wastes resulted from military exercise and their negative influences are imminent risks for our environment. To eliminate this, first we have to make the classification of wastes and secondly their index evaluation. The indexing can frame negative potential influence of wastes even before actual start of the exercise, so that we can evaluate negative impacts and arrange preventive measures beforehand. With using tablets and charts, the article depicts the process of classification and index appraisal of wastes, originating during military exercise. The method is being developed at the Defence University in Brno and was presented in front of Environmental Training Working Group (NTG/ ASG) and consulted with individual representative of Alliance nations. However Hazard Impact Index method is developed for testing purpose within a mechanised company of the Czech Ground Forces, ACR. Another step is the creation of algorithm for the conversion of index values for higher organic units and levels of the Army of the Czech Republic. |
Capt. Leo Class (ret.) - Veteran of World War IIPersonal dataDr. Petr MajerVojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 2/2006, Vol. XV. (XLVII.): 190-191 As many others, after the break of WWII, in 1940 he fled via Hungary to Yugoslavia. He joined the French Foreign Legion so that he could receive a visa to Alepa, capitol of Syria. But situation quickly changed. France lost war with Nazi Germany and Czechoslovak armed group moved to Gedera (Israel). After several reorganisations and fights in Egypt, his infantry unit was redeployed to England. There he was assigned to tank troops. At the battle of Dunkerque (France) he was injured and it was necessary for him to be hospitalised. He underwent through several hospitals in France and Belgium. After his return to Czechoslovakia he was assigned to unit that took care of UNRRA, they protect and guarded food and deliveries of military surplus. In 1948-1968 he worked in mechanic and engineering industry (ČKD Praha); in 1968, the year of Russian invasion, he left his country and asked for asylum in Austria. With the help of his uncle he found employment in steel works in Chicago (USA). He was decorated by many state/departmental medals, e.g. Czechoslovak War Cross 1939, or Medal for Bravery, etc. |
Rozvoj obrannych schopnosti Evropske uniePlukovník Ing. Vladimír Šilhan, CSc., MScVojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 4/2005, Vol. XIV. (XLVI.): 3-10 |
Moznosti chemickeho vojska pri plneni zavazku Severoatlanticke alianceIng. Stanislav Uhlíř, Ph.D.Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 4/2005, Vol. XIV. (XLVI.): 151-155 |
Vedeni operaci a bojove cinnosti v zastavenych prostorechPodplukovník doc. Ing. Dušan Sabolčík, CSc.Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 3/2004, Vol. XIII. (XLV.): 148-162 |
Revoluce ve vojenskych zalezitostechIng. Karel Kozák, Ph.D.Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 4/2001, Vol. X. (XLII.): 67-84 |
K poslani a zamereni cinnosti Univerzity obranyProf. Ing. Karel Novotný, CSc.Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 3/2004, Vol. XIII. (XLV.): 83-96 |
Aktualni poznatky z operaci v zastavenych prostorech Afghanistanu a IrakuVojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 2/2004, Vol. XIII. (XLV.): 80-87 |
Colonel (ret.) Miroslav Liškutin, DFC - Veteran of World War IIPersonal dataPlk. v.v. Petr MajerVojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 4/2006, Vol. XV. (XLVII.): 165-166 He was born in the early part of the last century, in 1919. After the German occupation, he fled the country and in 1939 he joined French Foreign Legion. He fought in Southern France and after the defeat of France he flew to England, where he was requalified for Spitfires. He took part in two operational runs, so he belonged among the most engaged and dedicated Czech pilots. In 1945 he was awarded DFC. Returning to his native country, he became a flying instructor and in 1946 Capt. Liškutin was assigned Aide, 7th Air Regiment, Brno. After 1948 (when communists came to power), he was dismissed from the Czech Air Force, and again escaped abroad. In Britain he joined the Royal Air Force. He retired in 1962 to find a position in a civilian airline company. He accepted the offer to become a pilot instructor in the Republic of Zambia (Central Africa). He wrote two books that were also published in the Czech Republic. Apart from the above mentioned DFC, he was awarded 5 Czechoslovak War Crosses 1939, Medal for Bravery, Merit Medal and many others. |
Dynamic Model of Processes and Employing Outsourcing in the ACRNonreviewed - ResearchIng. Pavel Vyleťal, kpt. Ing. Pavel Foltin, Ph.D.Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 3/2006, Vol. XV. (XLVII.): 183-189 The practice of a company sending work to outside factories to reduce production costs is called outsourcing. Outsourcing is one of many methods that might help defence department to fulfil a number of various tasks that either can't be accomplished within the armed forces or such work or services can be obtained at low-costs in civil sector. The authors propose several practicable techniques using dynamic outsourcing model to identify prospective services to support given transformation process. |
Decision Superiority in Operations Other Than War and Military IntelligenceInformational pagesVojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 2/2006, Vol. XV. (XLVII.): 100-101 Building up a picture of adversaries in complicated operations other than war (OOTW) requires fresh thinking on the collection and analysis of intelligence material, writes Dr Dave Sloggett in Jane's Defence Weekly No 48/2005. Operations undertaken in present-day theatres include the need to arrest war criminals, defeat insurgency operations and disrupt the activities from those engaged in criminal activities that do not respect national boundaries (trafficking, drugs smuggling and the proliferation of weapons of mass effect). OOTW pose problems for the development of what is now referred to as effects-based operations, where the use of kinetic devices to destroy a target is one way to achieve an outcome. One important element of a solution is to build common definitions of terms that enable a discipline to be brought to the underlying freedom of authors compiling contact reports. Projects such as Dabinett, a multifaceted system of systems programme, can link together information contained in existing systems. Commanders able to exploit this capability, against the complex background in which OOTW are conducted, will truly take superior decisions. |
The Cohesion of Military UnitsMilitary artIng. Josef NastoupilVojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 1/2006, Vol. XV. (XLVII.): 75-78 This article presents not only an non-conventional approach towards psychology of military groups, but also offers the deep insight into British way of military thinking. This article is concerned with cohesion in its broadest sense. The term cohesion is usually used to describe one of the many contributions to morale. British military doctrine says that manoeuvres approach is an approach to operation in which shattering the enemy's overall cohesion and will to fight is paramount. The cohesion in this context is being used to describe the complex interaction of the physical, moral and conceptual components of fighting. A thorough understanding of the cohesion between people would enhance their fighting power. The good leadership is the means by which an understanding of what enables cohesion can be used to bring it about. Source: Human Cohesion; Shock and Surprise on the Battlefield (D. Rowland, D. Roney, J. Storr), British Army Review No 137, 2005. |
Strategicke skoleni dustojnikuVojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 1/2005, Vol. XIV. (XLVI.): 150-152 |
Bezpecnost Ceska a SlovenskaDr. Štefan Volner, CSc.Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 3/2004, Vol. XIII. (XLV.): 28-39 |
Anabaze ruskych legii 1918-1920JUDr. Ivan KudelaVojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 1/2004, Vol. XIII. (XLV.): 154-162 |

