How to apply wargaming to intelligence?
A wargame is a strategy game in which two or more players command opposing armed
forces in a realistic simulation of an armed conflict. Wargaming may be played for
recreation, to train military officers in the art of strategic thinking, or to study
the nature of potential conflicts. Many wargames recreate specific historic battles,
and can cover either whole wars, or any campaigns, battles, or lower-level
engagements within them. Many simulate land combat, but there are wargames
for naval and air combat as well.
Generally, activities where the
participants actually perform mock combat actions (e.g. friendly warships firing
dummy rounds at each other) are not considered wargames. Some writers may refer to a
military's field training exercises as "live wargames", but certain institutions
such as the US Navy do not accept this. Likewise, activities like paintball are
sports rather than wargames. Wargames are a mental activity.
How to
implement wargaming?
The implementation of wargaming is not
really complicated. A common misconception is that it requires complex computer
programs, detailed map-computing systems, and intricate rules. If this is the case,
wargaming does not meet the fast-paced needs of intelligence analysis. In fact, this
is not true of all wargames.
At its simplest, a wargame requires only pairs
of players representing different people or organizations and a referee to determine
the sequence and outcome of actions. A slightly more complex game requires only a
map, pieces representing the various forces, and some simple rules. We can implement
a wargame in a conference room, or around a table, and complete it in one to two
hours. It may seem like a long time to commit to a wargame, but most analysts have
experienced attending long meetings without any useful results at the end.
How to apply wargaming to intelligence?
1. Staff
training
Diversity for intelligence analysts is the key to avoiding
blind spots and preventing groupthink. The focus of building diverse teams is to
bring in analysts with no military experience. But military intelligence leaders
cannot accept that these analysts have no knowledge of military operations.
Wargaming, as part of new analyst training, can help analysts expand their structure
in ways that lectures and readings cannot, by focusing them on factors that
influence realistic military decisions, such as maneuver, firepower, and logistics.
2. Daily analytical work
Analysts can also add
military chess to their arsenal of tools to use in their daily work. As mentioned
earlier, the implementation of a wargame exercise is not complicated. Analysts can
examine specific battles, campaigns or wars in a structured and dynamic manner
around a map in a conference room. The insights gained through the use of wargaming
can help guide intelligence gathering or identify new analytical issues.
3. Interagency cooperation
On a larger scale,
wargaming can be a key enabler of mutual cooperation within the intelligence
community. Intelligence analysts can build networks of peers and regularly
communicate results to each other in a community of common interest. This is
important, but the former needs to be driven by the analysts themselves, and the
latter is often difficult to achieve. Large-scale, cross-agency chess can bring
analysts together for a few days to conduct in-depth rollout activities. During this
time they are able to improve mutual understanding, discuss existing intelligence
reports and apparent intelligence gaps, and explore various avenues of analysis.
This experience helps foster deep and long-term relationships between agencies.