Joseph Fouche has reworked the 40 maxims of Colin S. Gray’s Fighting Talk:
- The overlapping contexts of war are all important.
- War is about peace. Peace can be about war.
- It’s harder to make peace than it is to make war.
- War works but beware the unexpected side effects.
- Peace and order aren’t self-enforcing. Somebody has to create and maintain them.
- When a political community makes war and peace, its society and culture make war and peace.
- While reason controls war, passion and chance are always plotting against it.
- There is more to war than warfare.
- While politics rules war, it is frequently ignorant of just what it’s gotten itself into.
- War is always a gamble.
- Knowledge of strategy is vital: the flame of strategic understanding must be kept burning.
- Strategy is more difficult than politics and tactics.
- Bad strategy kills but bad politics and bad tactics are accomplices to the crime.
- If Thucydides, Sun Tzu, and Clausewitz didn’t say it, it’s probably not worth saying.
- Today’s hip new strategic concept is tomorrow’s stale left-over, at least until it’s rediscovered, recycled, and revealed as a new strategic gospel handed down from on high.
- The enemy gets a vote. Bugger for us.
- Time is the most unforgiving dimension of strategy.
- You can’t escape friction but it doesn’t have to kill you.
- Geography is the medium through which all strategy must act.
- Strategy deals with more than the military.
- The impossible is impossible: impossible is a permanent condition, not a passing problem.
- People matter most.
- Military power is the final arbiter of politics.
- The only test of military excellence is performance in war.
- Military excellence can’t guarantee strategy success.
- Victory in battle does not guarantee political or strategic success but defeat all but guarantees failure.
- There is more to war than firepower: the enemy is more than a set of target coordinates.
- Logistics is the arbiter of strategic opportunity.
- Bad times return.
- There are always thugs, villains, rogues, and fools out there who’re out to get us.
- Existential threats happen.
- Prudence is the supreme virtue in statecraft and strategy.
- Strategic history punishes good intentions.
- Defense costs are certain. Security benefits are uncertain and debatable.
- Arms can be controlled but not with arms control.
- Nothing of real importance changes: modern history is not modern.
- History can be twisted to prove anything. But it’s the only guide to the future we have.
- The future is not foreseeable: nothing becomes outdated faster than today’s tomorrow.
- Surprise is unavoidable but its impact is not.
- Tragedy happens.