http://www.defenselink.mil/news/newsarticle.aspx?id=56760


U.S. Department of Defense
American Forces Press Service
November 18, 2009


U.S., NATO Officials Tackle Interoperability
By Gerry J. Gilmore



-The world has witnessed hybrid-type warfare before, noted French navy Rear 
Adm. Christian Canova, deputy assistant chief of staff for future abilities, 
research and technology at Allied Command Transformation, a NATO command 
collocated with Joint Forces Command in Norfolk, Va. 
The British in Northern Ireland, the French in Algeria and the United States in 
Vietnam, Canova explained, all fought opposing forces that employed a mix of 
guerrilla and conventional warfare during the 20th century. Yet, although 
hybrid warfare is not new, he added, not all of NATO’s 28 member nations have 
experience confronting such a threat. 



WASHINGTON: U.S. and NATO representatives are gathered in Rome brainstorming 
for solutions to make their security elements work better together, officials 
said today. 

Security experts participating in Concept Development and Experimentation 
Conference workshops are pondering U.S.-NATO interoperability issues such as 
countering hybrid threats, security force assistance, strategic communications 
and deterring nonstate actors, said Navy Rear Adm. Dan W. Davenport, chief of 
U.S. Joint Forces Command’s joint concept development and experimentation 
directorate. 

The annual conference began Nov. 16 and ends tomorrow. 

One insight that surfaced at the conference is “the need to embed strategic 
communications in every aspect of operations and making that a part of the 
planning and execution of the operations themselves,” Davenport said. 

Conference participants also ponder “the complexity and the uncertainty of the 
future environment,” Davenport said. 

For example, he said, security experts believe that some small, nonstate actors 
may one day possess large, conventional military capabilities [sic]. U.S. and 
NATO military forces “must be prepared to be able to deal with the full range 
of operations and the full range of capabilities that we face,” Davenport said, 
as well as possess the ability to operate in several potential threat 
environments. 

Some security experts also predict that future potential enemies, both nonstate 
actors and possibly nation states, will turn to a mix of asymmetrical and 
conventional threats, known as hybrid warfare, to confront the prodigious 
military power of the United States and its allies. 

The world has witnessed hybrid-type warfare before, noted French navy Rear Adm. 
Christian Canova, deputy assistant chief of staff for future abilities, 
research and technology at Allied Command Transformation, a NATO command 
collocated with Joint Forces Command in Norfolk, Va. 

The British in Northern Ireland, the French in Algeria and the United States in 
Vietnam, Canova explained, all fought opposing forces that employed a mix of 
guerrilla and conventional warfare during the 20th century. Yet, although 
hybrid warfare is not new, he added, not all of NATO’s 28 member nations have 
experience confronting such a threat. 

NATO’s challenge is to have a common understanding of hybrid warfare among its 
28 members, Canova said. 
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