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ARRC JOURNAL disparate and discreet, but are frequently coordinated through state driven agendas. The opportunity to realise political goals by manipulating the shared reality is both attractive and substantial. It comes as a low cost, low risk option with significant potential. This creates multiple participants with competing agendas, who exist in a constant state of conflict. With no penalties to participation, there is little requirement to deescalate the information war. This has created an environment akin to Hobbes’ State of Nature, but with no compelling reasons to enter into a mutual contract. 6 Governments do seek to curtail the actions of malign forces in their immediate vicinity, but only create localised and temporary solutions. The actors within the information environment will then evade, or ignore, the regulation. 7 Thus the opportunities far outweigh the risks for external participants, giving them the ability to influence perceptions and shape reality. 8 In the accelerating information environment, intelligent engagement will be multifaceted. Requiring a layered, coordinated and pan- disciplined response, each challenge must be treated as unique. The Military Problem When the military enters into this environment it encounters several key issues in understanding. Firstly, we use the wrong lexicon. Descriptions of the strategic, operational and tactical levels simply do not apply. They lead to confusion about where interactions should take place. Any subsequent attempt to enforce the recognised military levels inevitably leaves gaps. Equally the deep, close and rear areas are not relevant – especially when our adversaries achieve simultaneous effects across the spectrum. 9 In addition, the military relationship with technology must be considered. Throughout the 20th Century, innovation was often driven by conflict; engendering a deep military understanding. The subsequent advent of the digital age has seen this relationship invert, with commercial off-the-shelf purchases and hired expertise defining how we operate. This has depleted the instinctive understanding of the environment in which the military must now operate. Equally, it is has become apparent we cannot apply our conceptual rationale to our adversaries. Whilst our actions may seem reasonable to us, they may be viewed as an act of war by others. Similarly, our adversaries may deploy their considerable capabilities, when we believe no virtual threshold has been crossed. There are no governing treaties or universal rules of engagement born of a comparable conflict. Furthermore, our structures are ill suited to encourage understanding in an asymmetric environment. With cyber, military deception, STRATCOM and PSYOPS (amongst others) in cognitive and structural silos, speed of response is reduced. In a space that is simultaneously the domain, medium and target – this can be fatal. Especially when our adversaries successfully promote an integrated approach across their “information weapons”. 10 Finally, we must redefine our understanding of the target audiences. Combatants, key influencers and commanders alike are now subjected to 360-degree digital targeting. Their partners, local communities and families all now have a place on the information battlefield. Engaging With the Environment In the accelerating information environment, intelligent engagement will be multifaceted. Requiring a layered, coordinated and pan-disciplined response, each challenge must be treated as unique. Resisting the temptation to answer-by-scenario, the inherent agility of the environment demands an agile response. It would be dangerous and disorientating to do otherwise, as our adversaries have embraced this idea before us. 11 Conclusion This article is a limited think piece, outlining the author’s understanding of the information environment. It suggests that our current familiarity with the information environment only mimics understanding and that the constant acceleration of the environment makes it an uncomfortable place to operate. Through the acceptance of this state of nature, and all the actors in it, success is possible. The article subsequently suggests adjusting the lexicon, altering conceptual rationales and reassessing the force structure. These changes may then generate the speed and agility required to be competitive in the environment. Finally, the article outlines thee distinct characteristics of the information environment to give a flavour of the challenges to come. ABOUT THE AUTHOR Major Chris Bell is a 12-year veteran of the British Army and currently serves as the ARRC’s Psychological Operations planner. In his previous assignment he served as the Executive Officer for the United States Army Training Establishment’s Cobra Reconnaissance Team at Fort Irwin, California. Maj. Bell has served on three separate combat deployments to Afghanistan. A native of Durham City, England, Maj. Bell holds a Bachelor’s Degree in Politics from Lancaster University. If the military resolves these intrinsic issues, it can then focus on understanding the environment itself. This is the only logical pathway to intelligent participation. 6 Thomas Hobbes, Leviathan or the Matter, Forme, & Power of a Common-wealth Ecclesiasticall and Civill (London: Andrew Cooke, 1651), 17. 7 Adam Candeub and Mark Epstein, “Platform, or Publisher,” City Journal, May 7, 2018, https://www.city-journal.org/html/platform-or-publisher-15888.html. 8 Mark Laity, “Les apories de la communication stratégique en Afghanistan, “ Politique étrangère, 2013, https://www.cairn.info/revue-politique-etrangere-2013-4-page-161.htm. 9 Valery Gerasimov, “The Role of the General Staff in the Organization of the Country’s Defence in Accordance with the New Statue on the General Staff, Approved by the President of the Russian Federation,” Bulletin of the Academy of Military Science, 2014. 10 Timothy Thomas, “Information Security Thinking: A Comparison of U.S., Russian, And Chinese Concepts,” Foreign Military Studies Office, July 2001, https://community.apan.org/wg/ tradoc-g2/fmso/m/fmso-monographs/240293. 11 Michael Chase and Arthur Chan, China’s evolving approach to integrated strategic deterrence (Santa Monica, CA: RAND Corporation, 2016), https://www.rand.org/pubs/research_reports/ RR1366.html. 66 ALLIED RAPID REACTION CORPS