TY - JOUR
T1 - What Military Commanders do and how they do it
T2 - Executive Decision-Making in the Context of Standardised Planning Processes and Doctrine
AU - Sjøgren, Søren
PY - 2022/11/15
Y1 - 2022/11/15
N2 - In this article, I explore how contemporary military commanders understand command in the context of standardised planning processes, doctrine, and a supporting staff organiation. The article is based on 30 interviews with former and current NATO commanders and senior staff officers. I describe the interplay between commanders and their staff, including its clear division of labour, authority, and responsibility. I argue that commanders make key decisions in the planning process based on professional judgement. Commanders recognise the usefulness and limits of structured decision-making processes and doctrine while acknowledging also the need for surprise, creativity, and risk-taking. Left unattended, the military staff tends to develop mechanical behaviour by following a bureaucratic logic of rationality, control, and optimisation. In this context, command is a distinct and necessary function for the making of key decisions that allow for creative applications of doctrine, while avoiding any succumbing to predictable textbook solutions. Finally, the article points toward the importance of developing future commanders and their staff officers to understand the limits of doctrine and procedural approaches and develop professional judgement.
AB - In this article, I explore how contemporary military commanders understand command in the context of standardised planning processes, doctrine, and a supporting staff organiation. The article is based on 30 interviews with former and current NATO commanders and senior staff officers. I describe the interplay between commanders and their staff, including its clear division of labour, authority, and responsibility. I argue that commanders make key decisions in the planning process based on professional judgement. Commanders recognise the usefulness and limits of structured decision-making processes and doctrine while acknowledging also the need for surprise, creativity, and risk-taking. Left unattended, the military staff tends to develop mechanical behaviour by following a bureaucratic logic of rationality, control, and optimisation. In this context, command is a distinct and necessary function for the making of key decisions that allow for creative applications of doctrine, while avoiding any succumbing to predictable textbook solutions. Finally, the article points toward the importance of developing future commanders and their staff officers to understand the limits of doctrine and procedural approaches and develop professional judgement.
KW - Bureaucracy
KW - Command
KW - Doctrine
KW - NATO
KW - executive decision-making
KW - Bureaucracy
KW - Command
KW - Doctrine
KW - NATO
KW - executive decision-making
U2 - 10.31374/sjms.146
DO - 10.31374/sjms.146
M3 - Journal article
SN - 2596-3856
VL - 5
SP - 379
EP - 397
JO - Scandinavian Journal of Military Studies
JF - Scandinavian Journal of Military Studies
IS - 1
ER -