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Preventivni valka, ci preemptivni utok?Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 1/2004, Vol. XIII. (XLV.): 79-92 |
Ustaveni komplexniho systemu rizeni bezpecnosti Ceske republikyPhDr. Antonín Rašek, PhDr. Miloš Balabán, Ph.D.Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 4/2002, Vol. XI. (XLIII.): 3-20 |
Velitelstvi ozbrojenych sil v Evrope - USEUCOMPlk. Ing. František Valach, CSc.Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 5/1995, Vol. IV. (XXXVI.): 98-104 |
Intelligence in Asymmetric Operation of US ArmyInformational pagesDoc. Ing. Oldřich Horák, CSc.Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 4/2006, Vol. XV. (XLVII.): 81-86 In today's conflicts, such as the Global War on Terrorism in Iraq and Afghanistan, the threat is more difficult to define; in fact, there are often multiple threats working against our forces concurrently. Our army lacks first-hand information from current battlefields, so that the author must make use of mediated experiences. The paper is therefore based upon articles from foreign military magazines, namely Intelligence Synchronization on a Nonlinear Battlefield (Military Intelligence Professional Bulletin 4/2004) and Intelligence in Peacekeeping Operation (International Journal of Intelligence and Counterintelligence 1/1997). It is not a mere translation or compilation, but ingenious summing up of discussed ideas. In this study, the author thinks over intelligence synchronization and proposes a new way of looking at it. Methodology heads from priority intelligence requirements towards specific information requirements, via indicators, and so on. The purpose of intelligence synchronization is to focus efforts to build, refine, or clarify the commander's understanding of the battlefield and the threat. |
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. |
U.S. Airforce's Unmanned VehiclesMilitary professionalIng. Josef NastoupilVojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 1/2006, Vol. XV. (XLVII.): 160-162 UAV specialists predict that within ten years, half the aircraft flying will be unmanned. They also foresee conflicts where a few soldiers will dominate stateside battlefields. The UAV Center of Excellence is going to draw the unmanned part of the Air Force, to study the best ways to use UAVs. The Air Warfare Centre at Nellis, Nevada, develops tactics for the use of aircraft and directs combat training. The UAV center would take on a whole range of issues from airspace control to various kinds of systems. Unmanned aircraft are to expect to play a key role in delivering directed-energy weapons to battlefields. Stealth will become a standard in UAV fleets just as it is in manned combat aircraft today. A number of additional improvements are expected to increase the capability of Predator squadrons. UAVs may have to specialize in strike or intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance. Source: articles by David A. Fulghum, Aviation Week and Space Technology No 12, 2005. |
Quo vadisMgr. Antonín KonrádVojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 3/2005, Vol. XIV. (XLVI.): 171-176 |
Stredne tezke silyVojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 2/2005, Vol. XIV. (XLVI.): 147-150 |
Strategicke skoleni dustojnikuVojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 1/2005, Vol. XIV. (XLVI.): 150-152 |
Gendrova rovnost vykonu sluzby a profesnich karier ACRMgr. Jaroslava Jandová, Mgr. Eva PavlíkováVojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 1/2003, Vol. XII. (XLIV.): 127-138 |
Rizeni vyzkumne podpory cilu silIng. Josef Janošec, CSc. doc. Ing. Bohuslav Víšek, CSc.Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 2/2001, Vol. X. (XLII.): 28-32 |
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). |
Moznosti participace vojaku na politickem procesu v USA, Nemecku a Ceske republicePhDr. Zdeněk Kříž, Ph.D.Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 1/2005, Vol. XIV. (XLVI.): 93-98 |
Teaching Terminology at the Economy and Management Faculty, UO BrnoConferencePhDr. Alena LangerováVojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 4/2006, Vol. XV. (XLVII.): 113-115 |
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 |
Zdrojove zabezpeceni bezpecnosti a obrany Ceske republikyDoc. Ing. Jozef Šmondrk, Ph.D.Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 4/2004, Vol. XIII. (XLV.): 23-32 |
Nektere zkusenosti ze zapojovani vnejsich zdroju v prostredi obranyProf. PhDr. Miroslav Krč, CSc.Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 3/2003, Vol. XII. (XLIV.): 71-82 |
Predpoklady tvorby bezpecnostni politiky po vstupu Ceske republiky do Evropske uniePhDr. Antonín RašekVojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 3/2002, Vol. XI. (XLIII.): 69-80 |
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. |
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. |
Programy pripravy jednotek ACRPodplukovník Ing. Jiří Víteček, Ing. Štefan ZigoVojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 4/2005, Vol. XIV. (XLVI.): 146-150 |
Problemy asymetrieJean-Christophe BechonVojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 2/2005, Vol. XIV. (XLVI.): 151-154 |
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). |
Oral Communication Capacity: the Format of Military BriefingInformational pagesPhDr. Zdena Rosická, CSc.Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 1/2006, Vol. XV. (XLVII.): 119-120 Briefing is a covering term for orders, instructions, detailed explanations or summaries given on the current situation, namely to subordinates, reporters, etc. Actually, there are four basic types of military briefing, varying according their purpose. They must define problem, summarise facts, from which you may draw conclusions. Next you draw up variations and analyse them. Finally you put proposals, identify consent and dissent. At the end you will solve arising discrepancies; you will newly evaluate originated variants. Always keep in mind that you have to be short, concise, careful, factual, and relevant. Proposals must be clear, unequivocal. There must be enough time for questions from the audience. |
Aspekty lidskeho chovani v davu a regulace pohybu davu pri mimoradnych udalostechIng. Bc. Radomír ŠčurekVojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 4/2005, Vol. XIV. (XLVI.): 90-98 |
Moralni limity strategickeho utokuVojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 1/2003, Vol. XII. (XLIV.): 93-104 |

