The main content of all net-centric wars consists of effects-based operations (EBO). This is the most important concept in the entire net-centric warfare theory developed in the US. EBO are defined by US specialists as a combination of actions aimed at forming a specific model of behavior among friends, neutral forces, and enemies during peace, crisis, and war. (Edward A. Smith, Jr. "Effects based Operations. Applying Network centric Warfare in Peace, Crisis and War", Washington, DC: DoD CCRP, 2002.) EBOs main result is the establishment of full and absolute control over all parties to the conflict (including armed conflict), and their complete manipulation under all circumstances. Including when the conflict is ongoing, when it is threatening, and when there is peace.
The essence of net-centric warfare is that it does not have a beginning or an end, it is being conducted on a permanent basis,
Its a design for global manipulation and total control on a world scale. That is apparent from the EBO definition.
Today one of the characteristic manifestations of NCW [Net-Centric Warfare] in a globalizing world are color revolutions. A Color Revolution (CR) is a net-centric operation whose objective is the removal of existing political regimes in another country. It is based on non-violent struggle methods developed by George Sharp in the 1980s (a US product, one of net-centric technologies). The CR concept implies establishing full control over a country and its territory without the use of armed force, if possible. It can be achieved by applying soft power which US political scientist Joseph Nye Jr. defines as a states (or alliances or coalitions) ability achieve desired international results through persuasion and not suppression, imposition, or compellence, which is characteristic of hard power. Soft power achieves its effect by inducing others to adhere to certain international norms of behavior, which leads to the desired outcome without applying compellence.
Color Revolution consequences.
For states and political systems, CRs contain aspects of colonialism. The interests of the target society are not taken into consideration, it is expendable ... The society itself is destabilized, social foundations are undermined, the respect for government disappears, dissatisfaction increases, and economy is in anything but a normal state. These are the ideal conditions to impose Western social models. US enters the country.
In the last 20 years, US and NATO transformed Ukraine into a country hostile to Russia also through the application of net-centric technologies. ... The outcome is the countrys territory passing under US control. ... Being a nuclear weapons state, Russia is considered by the US and NATO one of its main geopolitical adversaries.
This essay is broken into three separate parts. The first part covers US-NATO geopolitical strategy since the end of the Cold War, at the beginning of the New World Order, outlining the western imperial strategy that led to the war in Yugoslavia and the War on Terror. Part 2 analyzes the nature of soft revolutions or colour revolutions in US imperial strategy, focusing on establishing hegemony over Eastern Europe and Central Asia. Part 3 analyzes the nature of the imperial strategy to construct a New World Order, focusing on the increasing conflicts in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iran, Latin America, Eastern Europe and Africa; and the potential these conflicts have for starting a new world war with China and Russia.
These revolutions are portrayed in the western media as popular democratic revolutions, in which the people of these respective nations demand democratic accountability and governance from their despotic leaders and archaic political systems. However, the reality is far from what this utopian imagery suggests. Western NGOs and media heavily finance and organize opposition groups and protest movements, and in the midst of an election, create a public perception of vote fraud in order to mobilize the mass protest movements to demand their candidate be put into power. It just so happens that their candidate is always the Western US-favoured candidate, whose campaign is often heavily financed by Washington; and who proposes US-friendly policies and neoliberal economic conditions. In the end, it is the people who lose out, as their genuine hope for change and accountability is denied by the influence the US wields over their political leaders.
In Parts 1 and 2 of this series, I have analyzed US and NATO geopolitical strategy since the fall of the Soviet Union, in expanding the American empire and preventing the rise of new powers, containing Russia and China. This Part examines the implications of this strategy in recent years; following the emergence of a New Cold War, as well as analyzing the war in Georgia, the attempts and methods of regime change in Iran, the coup in Honduras, the expansion of the Afghan-Pakistan war theatre, and spread of conflict in Central Africa. These processes of a New Cold War and major regional wars and conflicts take the world closer to a New World War.
In March, Putin said it was necessary to analyze all "color revolutions" in order to not let it happen in Russia and protect Russian citizens from terrorists and extremists.
The "color revolutions" were a series of regime changes caused by protests in several post-Soviet republics, including the Rose Revolution in Georgia in 2003, the Orange Revolution in Ukraine in 2004 and a more violent Tulip Revolution in Kyrgyzstan in 2005.
In April, Moscow accused the United States and the European Union of attempting to stage another "color revolution" in Ukraine earlier this year, referring to February coup which resulted in the ouster of the Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych.
We've heard statements from Western officials that Russia owning Siberia (isn't) fair.
"The White House has set a course for confrontation, blaming Russia for all sins in connection with the Ukrainian crisis that they [U.S.] had provoked to a significant extent."
US-led NATO "continues its course toward containing Russia. Steps are taken to strengthen (its) military capacity at Russia's borders."
A previous article explained how color revolutions work. In 1997, RAND Corporation researchers John Arquilla and David Ronfeld developed the concept of "Swarming & the Future of Conflict."
Based on communication patterns and movements of bees and other insects. Applied to military conflicts and street protests.
War by other means. Exploiting the information revolution. Taking full advantage of "network-based organizations linked via email and mobile phones to enhance the potential of swarming."
In 1993, Arquilla and Ronfeldt prepared an earlier document. Titled "Cyberwar Is Coming!"
Saying "warfare is no longer primarily a function of who puts the most capital, labor and technology on the battlefield, but of who has the best information" and uses it advantageously.
State-of-the art IT techniques use "advanced computerized information and communications technologies and related innovations in organization and management theory," they explained.
Information technologies "communicate, consult, coordinate, and operate together across greater distances."
Cyberwar today is what blitzkrieg was to 20th century warfare. In 1993, Arquilla and Ronfeldt focused on military conflicts.
In 1996, studying net and cyberwar. Examining "irregular modes of conflict, including terror, crime, and militant social activism."
In 1997, developing the concept of swarming. Suggesting it might "emerge as a definitive doctrine that will encompass and enliven both cyberwar and net war."
Envisioning "how to prepare for information-age conflict." Calling swarming a way to strike from all directions.
Effectiveness depends on various elements able to interconnect. Using revolutionary communication technology.
Color revolutions reflect America's modern day New World Order strategy. Following Soviet Russia's dissolution. Direct and proxy hot wars rage at the same time.
US strategy is multi-faceted. Including subversion. Destabilization. Mass surveillance. Blitzkrieg propaganda. Successful swarming tactics accomplish coup d'etats by other means.
Russian President Vladimir Putin has criticized NATO for interference in the internal affairs of other countries. Putin said the military alliance provokes regional conflicts and triggers color revolutions. He added that NATO uses terrorists, fundamentalists, far-right nationalists and even neo-fascists as henchmen [Inserting: and Leftists, also,] to achieve its goals. The Russian president accused NATO of seeking to upset the balance of power. Putin pledged that Russia will not succumb to what he called NATOs militaristic craze. He said Russia can see the consequences of NATOs policies near its borders. The alliance has stepped up its military buildup near Russias western borders since it suspended all ties with Moscow in April 2014. This after Crimea rejoined Russia following a referendum in the Black Sea peninsula.