The Need for Organisational Resilience Chapter 5
[Text Box starts] Command Philosophy
Command is the authority vested in an individual to influence events and to order subordinates to
implement decisions; command is exercised by, or on behalf of, commanders. It comprises three
closely related elements: leadership, decision-making (including risk assessment) and control. The
commander’s role in command (employing the art of war) is critical, regardless of the technological
and other improvements in control (the science of war).
Military command at all levels is the art of decision-making, motivating and directing to
accomplish given missions. It requires a vision of the desired outcome(s), an understanding of
concepts, mission priorities and allocation of resources, an ability to assess people and risks, and
involves a continual process of re-evaluating the situation. A commander requires, above all, to
decide on a course of action (COA) and to lead his command. Thus leadership and decision-making
are his primary responsibilities. Command also involves accountability and control. However, control
is not an equal partner with command but merely an aspect of it. The execution of control is shared
between the commander and his staff.
Command is an intrinsically forceful, human activity involving authority as well as personal
responsibility and accountability. Command philosophy has four facets: a clear understanding of
superior commanders’ intent; a responsibility on the part of subordinates to meet that intent; the
importance of making a timely decision; and a determination, on the part of the commander, to see
the plan through to a successful conclusion. This philosophy requires a style of command that
promotes decentralised command, freedom and speed of action, and initiative – but one which
remains responsive to superior direction.
Effective employment and support of military forces is however, dependent on the Command and
Control (C2) arrangements established, from the highest to the lowest levels of authority. The balance
of this Chapter describes the principles on which the C2 of Allied joint operations are based. (North
Atlantic Treaty Organization and NATO Standardization Agency (NSA) 2010)
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