Military Review English Edition November December 2016 | Page 8

TABLE OF CONTENTS 10 The Crisis of National Identity 44 Transformative Staff Training in Ukraine Col. Nick Ducich, U.S. Army Lt. Col. Nathan Minami, U.S. Army Maj. Ryan Riggin, U.S. Army Capt. Jacob Austin, U.S. Army Samuel P. Huntington The author discusses the salience of and threats to American national identity in this chapter extracted from his book Who Are We? The Challenges to America’s National Identity. A U.S. unit helped a Ukrainian battalion staff adopt a contemporary mission-command focus that optimized the staff’s warfighting function integration and staff functional capability. 23 Migration as a Weapon in Theory and in Practice Dr. Kelly M. Greenhill A Tufts University professor of political science, Harvard research fellow, and awardwinning author provides an analysis of coercive engineered migrations, based on her book Weapons of Mass Migration: Forced Displacement, Coercion, and Foreign Policy. 52 Operational Contract Support The Missing Ingredient in the Army Operating Concept Maj. Gen. Edward F. Dorman III, U.S. Army Lt. Col. William C. Latham Jr., U.S. Army, Retired 37 Bridging the Gap between Policing and Counterinsurgency in Pakistan The authors describe the importance of the operational contract support process within the Army operating concept and highlight several key points about the process that are relevant for Army commanders. Yelena Biberman, PhD Philip Hultquist, PhD Farhan Zahid, PhD Four case studies from Pakistan demonstrate that police can and should play a larger role in counterinsurgencies. About the Cover: A Syrian family covered with thermal blankets walks along the coast of the Aegean Sea 27 October 2015 on the Greek island of Lesbos. The refugees had just arrived from Turkey. (Photo by Santi Palacios, Associated Press) 6 November-December 2016  MILITARY REVIEW