Long Time Coming: Developing and Integrating UAVs into the American, British, French, and Danish Armed Forces

Publikation: Bog/antologi/afhandling/rapportRapportForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Long Time Coming : Developing and Integrating UAVs into the American, British, French, and Danish Armed Forces. / Schaub Jr, Gary John; Kristensen, Kristian Søby; Pradhan-Blach, Flemming.

Center for militære studier, 2014. 43 s.

Publikation: Bog/antologi/afhandling/rapportRapportForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Schaub Jr, GJ, Kristensen, KS & Pradhan-Blach, F 2014, Long Time Coming: Developing and Integrating UAVs into the American, British, French, and Danish Armed Forces. Center for militære studier. <https://cms.polsci.ku.dk/publikationer/longtimecoming/Long_Time_Coming.pdf>

APA

Schaub Jr, G. J., Kristensen, K. S., & Pradhan-Blach, F. (2014). Long Time Coming: Developing and Integrating UAVs into the American, British, French, and Danish Armed Forces. Center for militære studier. https://cms.polsci.ku.dk/publikationer/longtimecoming/Long_Time_Coming.pdf

Vancouver

Schaub Jr GJ, Kristensen KS, Pradhan-Blach F. Long Time Coming: Developing and Integrating UAVs into the American, British, French, and Danish Armed Forces. Center for militære studier, 2014. 43 s.

Author

Schaub Jr, Gary John ; Kristensen, Kristian Søby ; Pradhan-Blach, Flemming. / Long Time Coming : Developing and Integrating UAVs into the American, British, French, and Danish Armed Forces. Center for militære studier, 2014. 43 s.

Bibtex

@book{031f82502bcd4e49ae51cd563780007b,
title = "Long Time Coming: Developing and Integrating UAVs into the American, British, French, and Danish Armed Forces",
abstract = "NATO nations are transforming their military forces to be able to engage in expeditionary warfare effectively. They are incorporating advanced technologies that enable military forces to find and strike targets precisely from great distances at little risk to themselves. The persistence of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) represents the next step in modern airpower{\textquoteright}s long-range reconnaissance/precision strike complex and has transformed ground operations. They were not demanded until their worth was proven in recent operations—after 60 years of development. The experiences of the United States, United Kingdom, France, and Denmark demonstrate why. UAVs have been difficult to develop, employ, maintain, and integrate into modern militaries and have only recently become effective. Such challenges should temper expectations that they represent an inexpensive alternative to all types of modern aircraft or that their proliferation will have a profound and systematic impact on the nature of warfare.",
author = "{Schaub Jr}, {Gary John} and Kristensen, {Kristian S{\o}by} and Flemming Pradhan-Blach",
year = "2014",
month = mar,
language = "English",
isbn = "9788773937273",
publisher = "Center for milit{\ae}re studier",

}

RIS

TY - RPRT

T1 - Long Time Coming

T2 - Developing and Integrating UAVs into the American, British, French, and Danish Armed Forces

AU - Schaub Jr, Gary John

AU - Kristensen, Kristian Søby

AU - Pradhan-Blach, Flemming

PY - 2014/3

Y1 - 2014/3

N2 - NATO nations are transforming their military forces to be able to engage in expeditionary warfare effectively. They are incorporating advanced technologies that enable military forces to find and strike targets precisely from great distances at little risk to themselves. The persistence of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) represents the next step in modern airpower’s long-range reconnaissance/precision strike complex and has transformed ground operations. They were not demanded until their worth was proven in recent operations—after 60 years of development. The experiences of the United States, United Kingdom, France, and Denmark demonstrate why. UAVs have been difficult to develop, employ, maintain, and integrate into modern militaries and have only recently become effective. Such challenges should temper expectations that they represent an inexpensive alternative to all types of modern aircraft or that their proliferation will have a profound and systematic impact on the nature of warfare.

AB - NATO nations are transforming their military forces to be able to engage in expeditionary warfare effectively. They are incorporating advanced technologies that enable military forces to find and strike targets precisely from great distances at little risk to themselves. The persistence of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) represents the next step in modern airpower’s long-range reconnaissance/precision strike complex and has transformed ground operations. They were not demanded until their worth was proven in recent operations—after 60 years of development. The experiences of the United States, United Kingdom, France, and Denmark demonstrate why. UAVs have been difficult to develop, employ, maintain, and integrate into modern militaries and have only recently become effective. Such challenges should temper expectations that they represent an inexpensive alternative to all types of modern aircraft or that their proliferation will have a profound and systematic impact on the nature of warfare.

M3 - Report

SN - 9788773937273

BT - Long Time Coming

PB - Center for militære studier

ER -

ID: 109768640