United States | Reinventing the army

The US Army’s chief of staff has ideas on the force of the future

But can he scale up his clever experiments?

General Randy George, Chief of Staff of the Army, speaks with paratroopers from the U.S. Army.
Photograph: Alamy

RANDY GEORGE joined the US Army in 1988. It had overhauled itself after the trauma of Vietnam. It had written a new doctrine, known as AirLand Battle, to defeat the Soviet Union in a war in Europe. And a few years later it would smash the Iraqi army in the first Gulf war, a conflict in which General George, as he is today, served as a young lieutenant. He is now in charge of that same army, and wants to reinvent it, continuously, for a new age.

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This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline “Reinventing the army”

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