samedi 25 octobre 2025

Weaponizing Time – Part II: The Global Operating System of Western Power

 

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Weaponizing Time – Part II: The Global Operating System of Western Power

From Multi-Domain Operations to the Army’s Unified Network, Western military doctrine is building the infrastructure to manage its decline through global, persistent attrition.


A Dada-era artwork by Francis Picabia depicting interlocking gears drawn in purple, black, and gold, overlaid with delicate mechanical diagrams.
Francis Picabia, “Machine Tournez Vite” (1916–1918). Ink, watercolor, and shell gold over a 19th-century lithograph.


Prelude: From Regional Wars to Planetary Contestation

Many believe the West, and the United States in particular, is in retreat: from Asia, from Europe, from the overextension of its own imperial logic. The evidence seems overwhelming: America's "forever wars" ending in humiliation, Europe's industrial base hollowing out, China's Belt and Road Initiative reshaping global trade routes, while BRICS+ nations slowly construct alternative financial architectures beyond Western control.

Yet foreign policy documents reveal a different trajectory entirely. Let’s consider this single line from the U.S. Army's Unified Network Plan 2.0, published quietly in early 2025:

"The initial Army Unified Network Plan (AUNP) was published… to address the changing character of war from episodic and regional to transregional and global."

Let those words settle: From episodic and regional to transregional and global.

This simple phrase constitutes a strategic directive of the highest order. The urban landscapes of Kyiv, the straits of Taiwan, the deserts of the Sahel, and the Arctic ice floes transform from separate conflicts into interconnected nodes within a vast, planetary system of applied pressure. No fanfare accompanies this declaration. No press release, no congressional briefing. Yet it marks a rupture as profound as any since 1945: the abandonment of discrete, bounded interventions for continuous, simultaneous engagement across every domain.

The implications become clearer when examining recent statements from US leadership. During the October 2025 NATO defense ministers meeting in Brussels, Secretary Pete Hegseth articulated the underlying logic:

"Peace through strength. You get peace when you are strong… The world is seeing that we have a peace president who seeks peace through standing by those who stand with the United States and for peace."

Beneath the peace rhetoric, however, lies a “proposition” of hegemonic alignment with the United States, or face the unleashing of military strength. The message targets "the world"; every nation must choose subordination or confrontation.

This planetary engagement system operates through multiple designs. The Pentagon calls it Multi-Domain Operations, a doctrine forged in the recognition that American air dominance can no longer be taken for granted, supply lines will be severed, and static bases can become death traps. Thus, soldiers must operate in dispersed, autonomous cells, seizing fleeting advantages with electronic jammers and long-range missiles, capabilities once confined to separate services. DARPA terms it Mosaic Warfare: decentralized command, disposable platforms, effects assembled in real time from pools of manned and unmanned systems. A system where fragmentation and impermanence are key to survival and lethality.

Now remember, in Weaponizing Time – Part I, we traced the psychological substrate driving this transformation: a social group-bound obsession with mastering historical time and territories, ensuring the future remains legible only through supposedly Western categories. That obsession has migrated from ideology into military doctrine itself. Western power elites experience rising multipolarity as an existential threat to their civilizational identity and to their social role (with all of its material implications), built on premises of supremacy.

As I wrote previously:

"The feeling of time running out accelerates imperial statecraft. Where the metropole once feared territorial enclosure, it now fears sovereignty by other means: development banks with their own standards, lithium nationalization, energy corridors that bypass favored hubs, payment systems that ignore the dollar. The pointillist empire of bases meets a world busy rerouting the map."

Now, strategic ambiguity and multi-domain logic supply the administrative infrastructure for a 21st-century "savage war" where whole societies are cast as civilizational threats, rendered fair game through sanctions that collapse wages and medicine imports, through tech denial lists that strangle industrial lifecycles, through media campaigns that fix an enemy's identity as inherently hostile. This essentialism licenses a strategy that must believe in the barbarism of its targets to justify permanent pressure, or worse.

A short video from NATO's Allied Command Transformation, introduced under the auspices of Florence Gaub's Strategic Foresight division, lays bare the mood of the moment. Gaub, a frequent guest on German talk shows and no stranger to inflammatory Russophobic commentary, embodies the transatlantic security elite's fusion of technocratic fluency and civilizational panic. The video itself pulses with a strange mix of urgency and glee:

"We have a pretty good idea of what the future of war looks like... We will have to be ready to fight in cities, in space, in the cyber domain, in the Arctic, and on the high seas. We have to relearn the language of deterrence. We expect the outlines of this future to emerge from 2030 onwards. We are in a race against time... And while all parties concerned—NATO and its adversaries—are aiming for short wars, reality often has the last word. For NATO, this means we have no time to lose. Tomorrow starts today. Your challenge, should you choose to accept it, is to take this foresight to war fight."

What kind of challenge is this? The tone borders on the ludic, as if war were a design problem, a simulation to be optimized. Yet the temporal anxiety reveals itself: "no time to lose," "race against time." Elite panic about closing windows drives the doctrines.

NATO's Strategic Foresight Analysis 2023 supplies the strategic justification:

"Pervasive competition is unfolding and spreading into new domains through all dimensions at all times."

Again: At all times. The very notion of episodic peace, of interludes between wars, is declared obsolete.

Taken together, these papers and reports eventually become budgets and battle plans, and then, self-fulfilling prophecies. A feedback loop tightens: the more the West militarizes every domain, the more its rivals respond in kind; the more rivals adapt, the more the West escalates. Yet, behind all of this lies a hollowed-out industrial base, aging populations, and a social contract in tatters.

The Western ruling strata's grand project becomes delay: to stretch the plateau of managed chaos long enough to preserve a hierarchy that can no longer justify itself through prosperity, innovation, or consent.


I. Introduction

The Army Unified Network Plan 2.0 and NATO’s Strategic Foresight Analysis 2023 constitute confessions of elite strategy that reveal three interconnected phenomena: the abandonment of traditional warfare constraints, the institutionalization of the ruling strata’s anxiety, and the construction of what I call the permanent attrition economy.

Strategic Ambiguity, Multi-Domain Operations, and Mosaic Warfare function as synergistic doctrines serving a singular purpose: maintaining indefinite low-intensity conflict that exhausts adversaries while masking domestic decline, and while preparing for high-intensity conflicts. Unlike previous imperial strategies that sought decisive victory, these approaches deliberately avoid resolution. This is likely because resolution would end the profit streams and strategic justifications that sustain them. And partly, because everything is built on the premise of a permanent existential threat that doesn’t know or understand peace.

This analysis proceeds through several interconnected arguments. First, contemporary military doctrine represents spatial fix mechanisms, David Harvey’s concept of how capitalism addresses overaccumulation crises through geographical expansion and restructuring. Second, these doctrines emerge from the ruling strata’s civilizational anxiety about losing “racial” and hierarchical supremacy, as well as their social role and economic and political power to rising non-Western powers. Third, the material contradictions inherent in these strategies, particularly Western deindustrialization and dependency on adversary supply chains, could make them self-defeating. The evidence base draws from official planning documents, strategic analyses, and the institutional networks that produce them.

The transformation from “episodic and regional” to “transregional and global” warfare represents something unprecedented: the militarization of planetary existence itself. Every domain — land, sea, air, space, cyber, and cognitive — becomes contested terrain. Every infrastructure system becomes dual-use. Every commercial relationship becomes potential leverage. The Westphalian system of bounded conflicts between sovereign states gives way to permanent, everywhere engagement.

Western elites face choices they cannot accept: compete through better policies and socio-economic models, or accept diminished influence in exchange for domestic renewal. Instead, they have chosen to militarize competition itself, treating economic development, technological advancement, and diplomatic cooperation by non-Western powers as military problems requiring military solutions.

Understanding this transformation requires analyzing both the institutional networks that produce these doctrines and the material contradictions that limit their effectiveness. For example, Germany’s role as a framework nation reveals how European industrial capacity is subordinated to US strategic priorities while maintaining illusions of autonomous leadership (see Part III). The Army Unified Network Plan’s dependence on commercial technologies controlled mostly by strategic competitors exposes the near-impossibility of the entire enterprise.

Through the analysis that follows, a portrait of ruling elite anxiety emerges that seeks to channel itself through strategic innovation. This ruling class would rather risk civilizational collapse than accept a multipolar world in which Western supremacy becomes one option among many rather than the only legitimate organizing principle for human society.


II. Strategic Ambiguity as Crisis Management

A. Ambiguity as the Management of Decline

In Weaponizing Time – Part I, we traced how Western power elites experience the developing process of multipolarity as a civilizational injury as well as a threat to their role and power in the world. In essence, it is about stretching the plateau of managed chaos until some external rupture restores room to maneuver. Strategic ambiguity is the operational expression of that delay and the management of this hegemonic crisis. It blurs intent so thoroughly that adversaries must prepare for every scenario, all the time.

Several purposes drive it. Psychologically, it aims to corrode confidence, to make leaders doubt their actions, to tire publics of readiness drills and threats, and to hedge planners against phantoms. Economically, it compels continuous mobilization and, at selective moments, dangerous relaxation: surge for one rumor, offers of peace and ceasefires, stand down for the next, expend funds and attention on decoys and contingencies. The result is a constant state of guesswork that exhausts material and mental resources, fractures diplomatic focus, and paralyzes long-term planning.


B. The Instruments of Ambiguity

Consider the various mechanisms such as:

  • Sanctions that are announced broadly, enforced selectively, then layered. Secondary penalties applied to some firms but not others.

  • Weapons decisions, Taurus, ATACMS, Tomahawk, are teased, delayed, re-signaled, parcelled in tranches.

  • Phantom threats like leaked plans for troop deployments that never materialize, B-52 sorties over the Sea of Okhotsk, carrier strike groups sailing above the Arctic Circle, sudden, unannounced, then gone. As the CSIS (Center for Strategic & International Studies) notes, these are examples of “dynamic force employment”, where surprise is supposed to work as a deterrent.

A psychological theater of attrition warfare emerges.


C. From Catchphrase to Doctrine

The 2018 U.S. National Defense Strategy condensed the method into an interesting instruction for operational unpredictability:

“Be strategically predictable, but operationally unpredictable… our dynamic force employment, military posture, and operations must introduce unpredictability to adversary decision-makers… maneuver competitors into unfavorable positions, frustrate their efforts, preclude their options while expanding our own.”

The rationale followed in the same breath: a more lethal, resilient, innovative Joint Force plus an alliance architecture to sustain influence and the “balances of power”. Failure, the document warns, risks diminished influence, frayed alliances, and reduced market access. Effectively, ambiguity is framed as a macro-stabilizer for the fragile state of Western hegemony.

RAND (2018) proposed a crisp definition, operational unpredictability = adversary uncertainty about how the United States would fight, and argued that the most promising path is to develop and demonstrate multiple credible courses of action (COAs) that require different enemy counters. Crucially, they noted that such unpredictability does not have to be hidden, it must be demonstrated. Public exercises, new weapons, leader statements: all feed the fog. What’s more, adversarial planners take a course of action seriously only if “there is clear and public political or military leadership support.” Ambiguity, then, is also performative. It requires spectacle.

Ultimately, the RAND study notes that one of the goals is to make an adversary “assess that the costs of preparing for conflict would be higher or the likelihood of adversary success may be lower.”


D. Scarcity and the Logic of Surprise

Another CSIS article (2020) openly acknowledges that this “operational unpredictability” is partly a response to stretched U.S. capabilities. With a finite force, surprise becomes a force multiplier. The report points to “bomber rotations and sorties, naval deployments, [and] exercises” that are “shorter and followed unexpected routes,” such as the deliberate deployment of a carrier strike group above the Arctic Circle or B-52 flights into the Sea of Okhotsk. These movements attempt to be signals of omnipresence designed to force a rival to defend every front at all times. Lastly, allies are invited to contribute, though the planning horizon remains deliberately opaque.

Taken together, the doctrine, the research, and the movement pattern paint a picture: keep adversaries guessing about the American way of war, demonstrate several viable plays, and vary which one appears on any given day.


E. The Diplomatic Register vs. the Operational Register

It helps to separate strategic ambiguity and operational uncertainty:

  • Strategic ambiguity lives in diplomacy and public signaling: conditional statements, proposals for peace or ceasefires, floating options, quiet media leaks about weapons or timelines, unofficial statements from sources close to decision-making elites, and even social media posts. It shapes perceptions of intent.

  • Operational uncertainty is engineered before and during armed interventions of some sort: alter embarkation points, vary axes and timings, mask logistics, and introduce novel COAs that force the other side to split counteractions.

The two concepts aim to create uncertainty across different spheres of foreign policy.


F. The Cases of Venezuela and Iran

A prime case study in this layered application of ambiguity is the evolving U.S. posture toward Venezuela. In 2025, the U.S. deployed its largest naval force to the Caribbean in decades, ostensibly for a “war on drugs.” Soon after, strikes targeted small boats at sea, murdering fishermen. Then the narrative shifted: the mission was no longer about cartels, but regime collapse. “The priority now is to force the departure of top Venezuelan government figures,” reported the Financial Times, quoting insiders who described Trump’s strategy as one of “keeping people off-balance.” This is strategic ambiguity in its purest form: a deliberately unsettled and escalating threat, leaving a sovereign government to wonder not if it will be attacked, but how and when.

On the media front, articles and social media posts, as well as the Nobel Peace Prize to opposition figures like María Corina Machado, who parrots the White House line on international media, are another layer of the strategy. The goal is controlled instability —a proof-of-concept for hybrid coercion in the Western Hemisphere.

Another example on the operational level is a recent high-intensity exchange, specifically between Israel and Iran. A CSIS report explains how modern Western warfare seeks information-driven shock. Strikes are designed to rupture the opponent’s belief that battle networks will function under fire. The goal is to fracture perception. The side that injects uncertainty into decision loops, erodes trust in systems, and makes leaders feel personally vulnerable can shape outcomes well before any significant deployment of brigades.


G. The Civilizational Lens

This approach is often justified by framing rivals as the original architects of “grey zone” hybrid warfare. As a 2016 Small Wars Journal article lamented, the U.S., as the “bulwark of the global international system,” found itself “hamstrung by its very adherence to rules that simply did not apply to everyone else.” The irony is staggering. The U.S. pioneered covert coups, Gladio networks, and sanctions-as-siege. Now it feigns outrage when others develop sovereign alternatives, payment systems that bypass SWIFT, energy corridors that ignore U.S. hubs, and development banks with non-dollar lending. To the U.S. elite, sovereignty itself is hybrid warfare.

The solution, as touted by proponents like Jerry Hendrix (current Chief of the OMB Shipbuilding Office and Deputy to the Associate Director for Defense at the Office of Management and Budget), was to re-embrace the “strategic ambiguity” of Eisenhower and Reagan, to “inject uncertainty of outcome into diplomatic dialogue to destabilize a nation’s enemies.” The message to the world is a simple, coercive binary: align unconditionally with U.S. interests and be granted predictability, or pursue sovereign independence and face relentless, engineered uncertainty.


H. Risks & Contradictions

The method carries hazards acknowledged in the technical literature. RAND flags cost, effectiveness trade-offs, and threat-perception spikes. The SFA23 foresight warns that EDTs (Emerging and disruptive technologies: AI, autonomous systems) increase strategic surprise and unintended escalation, especially when decision times compress and cognitive battle intensifies. Ambiguity can steady a deterrence ladder; it can also harden enemy threat lenses and provoke compensating risks.

Another danger lies in nuclear posture: tactical nukes are reintroduced not just for deterrence, but to signal that escalation thresholds are unknowable. Yet this logic collapses under its own civilizational lens of supremacy. If hegemonic ruling strata genuinely believe adversaries are “barbarians” incapable of rational calculation, as Part I exposes, then ambiguity loses its logic. Why signal subtly to those who cannot read signals? The result is a drift toward preventive clarity: explicit threats, red lines, and ultimately, war.


I. Ambiguity as Imperial Management System

In sum, ambiguity functions as the management system of empire in decline, a tool for buying time, dispersing risk, and staging coherence amid exhaustion. It stabilizes through confusion, stretches deterrence through illusion, and converts limited means into the appearance of global reach. Yet, the risk is that each turn of unpredictability demands new layers of coordination to sustain the illusion of control.

Out of this dependency emerges the next doctrinal phase of Western military thought: Multi-Domain Operations. Where ambiguity is temporal, MDO is spatial and systemic —a blueprint for organizing conflict across land, sea, air, cyber, and space.


III. Multi-Domain Operations: The Logic of Permanent Attrition

The bridge from ambiguity to application runs through the doctrine of Multi-Domain Operations (MDO). Where ambiguity manipulates time, MDO rearranges and uses space. It systematizes what the 2018 National Defense Strategy called for: strategic predictability for allies, operational unpredictability for adversaries, by giving the Joint Force a grammar for acting across land, sea, air, cyber, and space without waiting for a single decisive theater to formally open. In essence, MDO represents the formal codification of a profound, almost existential, shift in the American — and, by extension, Western — way of war: the abandonment of victory for the management of perpetual global pressure.


A. Genealogy: From Air–Sea Battle to Multi-Domain Operations

The doctrinal arc that produced Multi-Domain Operations began in the early 2010s:

Air–Sea Battle emerged as a remedy to growing anti-access/area-denial (A2/AD) threats, layered defenses of long-range missiles, sensors, and electronic jammers designed to hold U.S. forces at a distance. Its logic was largely technological and kinetic: disrupt, destroy, defeat the adversary’s A2/AD network through precision strikes and superior integration of naval and air assets.

That concept evolved into the Joint Operational Access idea around 2016, which acknowledged that no single branch could penetrate layered denial alone and shifted focus from dismantling specific enemy systems to defeating the adversary’s overall operational design and intent. It was an operational approach: a method to make strategy executable across services,

By 2016–17, the Army articulated Multi-Domain Battle, and the language soon widened into Multi-Domain Operations (MDO). The shift in vocabulary signaled a change of scale and purpose: competition, gray-zone maneuver, political warfare, and electromagnetic deception gained equal significance with classic combat. The new term captured a wider field of activity, warfare conducted far from any traditional frontline, and even including cyberspace and space itself.


B. From Concentric Denial to Ephemeral Corridors: MDO’s Operational Logic

The Army’s doctrinal capstone, TRADOC Pamphlet 525-3-1, The U.S. Army in Multi-Domain Operations 2028, names the new challenges: Peer competitors have layered long-range missiles, cyber intrusions, jammers, space sensors, and other systems into integrated A2/AD architectures. These create what TRADOC calls “layered stand-off”: concentric rings of effect that can deny access to forces across land, sea, air, space, and the electromagnetic spectrum. In practice, a layered stand-off can turn static bases, supply convoys, and even aircraft carriers into exposed nodes within a dense kill web, a network of sensors, shooters, and communications that provide targeting and effect at range.

As a solution on the battlefield, MDO assembles a kill web’s opposite: sensors, shooters, and maneuver elements are fused quickly via data links to create ephemeral corridors of relative advantage. However, MDO’s operational solution to these challenges follows a cadence that starts before any armed conflict: compete — penetrate — disintegrate — exploit — consolidate — return to competition on favorable terms. Within this evolving context, the aim is a sequence of interventions that keep the adversary off balance and reopen fleeting windows of advantage. Read as doctrine, this is attrition by multiple means: continuous pressure intended to make defense and recovery costly, time-consuming, and politically unsustainable.


C. Milley’s Warning and the Human Reality of Layered Stand-Off

The envisioned battlefield, if one considers the armed portions of the MDO cadence, is one of brutality and isolation. In a 2016 speech, then-Army Chief of Staff General Mark Milley described the scenario:

“On the future battlefield, if you stay in one place longer than two or three hours, you will be dead... being surrounded will become the norm.”

He described a world where static bases are annihilated, supply lines are severed, and soldiers, often cut off from command, must purify their own water and 3D-print their own parts. In this vision, the Army’s traditional role is inverted. “Land-based forces now are going to have to penetrate denied areas to facilitate air and naval forces,” Milley declared. “This is exact opposite of what we have done for the last 70 years... The Army — yes, the Army — we’re going to sink ships.” The reverse of a half-century of U.S. practice.

In essence, this doctrine is one developed for survival and sustained pressure to stifle and reverse competition in a world without safe areas, where every domain is perceived as a potential front line. Indeed, it is this perception of threats that has led to these doctrines.


D. The Gray Zone as Mirror

The MDO is a direct response to what military analysts termed and perceived as the “Gray Zone”, a conceptual space defined by this US Army War College report, Outplayed (2016), as “purposeful resistance to the American-led status quo.” The report continues:

“New, however, are the number of actors simultaneously empowered to resist U.S. influence effectively, the variety of routes and vectors from which they can threaten harm to core U.S. interests, and, finally, the volatility of an international system under persistent seismic pressure from the competing forces of integration and disintegration.”

In this framing, adversaries like Russia and China were not merely pursuing independent foreign policies; their actions, whether economic partnerships, information campaigns, or diplomatic relationships, were interpreted as inherently adversarial “grey zone” warfare, deliberately designed to operate just below the barrier that separated pre-war activities from full combat operations.

Indeed, the rationale for the MDO is spelled out in this Breaking defense article as follows:

“Russia and China do not recognize a state of peace, the way US law, doctrine, and culture do. Traditional US military planning goes from peace to war, and then we work our way methodically up the ladder of escalation. But Russia and China view conflict as a continuum.”

This characterization of the "Gray Zone" is an expression of the civilizatory lens of supremacy. The underlying logic pathologizes any form of development or international engagement that is not subservient to the US-led order. It operates on the premise that the only legitimate state behavior is alignment with Western interests. This is the intellectual foundation that allows the entirety of geopolitics to be redefined as a "military problem." By framing multipolarity itself as a "gray zone" threat, the doctrine of Multi-Domain Operations receives its moral and strategic license: the entire world becomes a battlespace, and every independent actor a legitimate target.


E. Class Strategy & Constraints

Yet beneath the MDO lies fragility. A 2023 Hague Centre for Strategic Studies report, Breaking Patterns, delivers a sobering verdict: European armies, in particular, suffer from mass shortfalls that no amount of networking can compensate for. Technology, the report warns, is not a panacea. The U.S. knows this. Yet MDO persists because its design serves ruling elite interests. It guarantees horizontal convergence: contracts for radar, cyber, orbital communication systems, AI, and now global network infrastructure. It enables below-threshold action: drone strikes, cyber sabotage, and information warfare. It facilitates occupation without territory: control over data flows, financial circuits, and supply chains, all while avoiding the costs of formal empire.

By designing a state of permanent, below-threshold conflict, it ensures the war economy hums indefinitely, a self-justifying engine of expenditure that tries to cover the deindustrialization and social decay at home. MDO is the gospel of a hegemony that abolishes peace, and that can only offer the managed chaos of endless, global “competition”.


F. From doctrine to infrastructure

MDO provides the operational logic for composing effects across domains. To scale the MDO, it needs a unified network that moves data, authorizations, and situational understanding across theaters at speed. Here, the Army Unified Network Plan 2.0 steps forward. The plan describes a world now multidomain, persistently contested and demands a data-centric approach that brings the global network and common data requirements to theaters.”

The next section looks at the AUNP 2.0 and shows how the network forms doctrine into planetary occupation by other means.


IV. The Army Unified Network Plan 2.0: The Digital Infrastructure of Planetary Occupation

A. From Regional War to Planetary Command

The Army Unified Network Plan 2.0 (AUNP 2.0), released in 2025, quietly codifies that the battlefield is now planetary. This document, couched in the lexicon of information technology, states that its purpose is to

address the changing character of war from episodic and regional to transregional and global.”

In other words, the United States Army no longer conceives of war as a succession of discrete campaigns limited by geography or duration, but as a continuous condition distributed across every domain, every network, every hour.

In its own language, the plan aims to “unify Army networks with common standards, systems, and processes,” creating a single digital architecture capable of “bringing the global network and common data requirements to theaters.” It is the logical extension of Multi-Domain Operations: if MDO provided the ideas for simultaneous warfare across land, sea, air, cyber, and space, AUNP 2.0 provides the digital nervous system that allows those dispersed actions to think and act as one.


B. The Global Operating System of War

The plan’s stated rationale is deceptively pragmatic. In an era of “persistently contested information environments,” it argues, static command posts, data centers, and even fiber-optic backbones are as vulnerable as forward bases. To survive, the network itself must become mobile, adaptive, and self-healing. Hence, the emphasis on agility in what the document calls DDIL conditions: denied, disrupted, intermittent, and limited bandwidth environments.

Under this premise, AUNP 2.0 folds every Army network into a Common Operating Environment (COE) and Common Services Infrastructure (CSI). These systems provide what in civilian terms would be cloud and edge computing: globally distributed data processing that links sensors, shooters, and decision nodes in real time. Artificial intelligence and machine learning are woven through the design to “enable data-driven decision-making capabilities across the force.” The ambition is planetary coherence: to ensure that, for instance, an intelligence feed from Syria can inform a strike in the South China Sea. In the report’s words, it allows a commander to “effectively oversee distributed forces from any location worldwide.”

The result is what the plan itself calls “global, cross-domain maneuver”: the world treated as a single integrated theater.


C. Zero Trust and the Logic of Pervasive Competition

Such a technical architecture enables the core strategic shift from the episodic to the persistent. The AUNP explicitly mandates a move to “Zero Trust” (ZT) security principles, succinctly defined as “never trust, always verify.” In a Zero Trust architecture, every data request, whether from a general at the Pentagon or a soldier in a forward trench, is treated as a potential threat. This mindset perfectly mirrors the assumption of pervasive competition, aka hybrid warfare, at all times.

This plan centralizes the network itself as the primary terrain of warfare. “Common standards, systems, and processes” now mean more than technical uniformity as they produce interoperability as hegemony. Every allied system that plugs into the network must conform to U.S. encryption, data structure, and command logic standards. In other words, through this digital infrastructure allies will weave their militaries into a US-led technological ecosystem from which they cannot decouple without surrendering their own operational capacity.


D. Occupation by Infrastructure

Mexican economist and geopolitical theorist Ana Esther Ceceña has described U.S. power as a “global occupation”, not territorial in the classical sense but infrastructural, exercised through logistics, finance, and communication networks that overlay rather than replace sovereignty. AUNP 2.0 reflects this line of thought. Control now depends on the ability to route data, decide what connects, and determine whose systems remain interoperable.

In this sense, the AUNP 2.0 transforms connectivity into a form of jurisdiction. It organizes the planet into a single operational domain, one in which data itself becomes a governed substance. To possess situational awareness across continents is to hold the command prerogative everywhere at once. The plan’s architecture turns the network into the empire’s territory and interoperability into its law.


E. Persistence and the Self-Fulfilling Prophecy

The plan’s core assumption —permanent contestation —creates its own justification. A “persistently contested information environment” is not only a description of future conflict but a mandate to engineer systems that are always on, always alert, always engaged. In building a network designed for uninterrupted readiness, the Army institutionalizes the very condition it fears: a world of constant low-level confrontation. The border between peace and war dissolves.

This perpetual vigilance, in turn, fuses with Multi-Domain Operations. AUNP 2.0 is the material substrate of MDO’s doctrine of compete, penetrate, disintegrate, exploit, and consolidate. The cadence requires uninterrupted data flow; the network guarantees it. The result is a feedback loop: global connectivity enables global contestation, and global contestation justifies ever-expanding connectivity.


F. The Empire’s Cognitive Infrastructure

AUNP 2.0 calls itself “data-centric,” but what it really describes is a form of planetary command cognition. The network’s sensors, analytic engines, and human operators form an integrated decision ecology in which perception, analysis, and strike capacity collapse into simultaneity. Within this system, information becomes weaponized awareness, structured by hierarchies of access. Whoever owns the network owns the tempo of global time.

In this architecture, persistence replaces presence. Bases can be withdrawn, flags lowered, yet the connective tissue remains, fiber, satellite, software, through which coercive power circulates invisibly. The world becomes an occupied bandwidth, and the network becomes the permanent garrison.


G. Transition: From Network to Mosaic

Even as MDO and the AUNP 2.0 extend the architecture of hybrid and gray-zone operations below the threshold of declared war, the Army’s unified network also furnishes the combinatorial logic for what comes next: Mosaic Warfare. The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) envisions a battlespace composed of “tiles” of effect—sensors, loitering munitions, decoys, jammers—each small and autonomous, yet linkable through shared data standards and instantaneous orchestration.

The network renders these fragments interoperable across distance; it decides when, where, and how they briefly assemble into a local configuration of force. The next section examines Mosaic Warfare as the operational corollary to the Unified Network: a doctrine of distributed lethality that both depends on and intensifies the infrastructural occupation traced above.


V. Mosaic Warfare: Complexity as Substitute for Capacity

A. The Doctrinal Origins of the Mosaic

Mosaic Warfare first took shape in circles around DARPA (Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency) and the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments (CSBA) around 2017, institutions that have long served as incubators of the operational imagination of the American empire. Out of their laboratories and conferences came the proposal to abandon the traditional notion of war as the orchestration of large, self-contained, multi-mission systems, and to think instead in terms of innumerable small, interoperable fragments, what DARPA researchers call tiles. Each tile can be a sensor, a loitering munition, a jammer, a decoy, or a shooter. None of these fragments is impressive by itself; each is fragile, limited, expendable. Yet when connected through shared data standards and real-time orchestration, they can be combined into a fleeting mosaic, a local, temporary, and context-specific kill web.

This, at least, is the vision: that the battlefield of the future will resemble an intricate digital tapestry woven moment by moment out of dispersed components, each contributing a sliver of lethality to an emergent whole. Where the twentieth-century military dreamt of unit cohesion, the twenty-first century dreams of recomposition. The linear “kill chain” that once guided the process of detection, targeting, and destruction is replaced by the “kill web,” a mesh that continuously reshapes itself under fire, recombining paths of action as others are severed.


B. Complexity as a Substitute for Industrial Mass

The appeal of such a system lies precisely in its promise to replace mass with complexity. Mosaic warfare emerged as a conceptual response to an uncomfortable strategic reality: the United States could no longer assume air superiority, uncontested supply lines, or technological advantages sufficient to offset adversary numbers. Rather than address this through expanded industrial production —an option foreclosed by deindustrialization —defense planners chose to weaponize complexity itself.

The 2020 Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments report framing the concept identified the operational challenge: U.S. military design reflects an attrition-centric view of warfare in which the goal is achieving victory by destroying enough of the enemy that it can no longer fight.” This approach fails against great powers possessing long-range sensor and precision weapons networks. The proposed solution abandons attrition for decision-centric warfare that imposes multiple dilemmas on an enemy rather than destroying their forces through superior numbers. When you cannot outproduce adversaries, you attempt to out-think them, making each engagement a cognitive puzzle.


C. The Logic of the Networked Swarm

DARPA’s own officials describe it this way: The battlefield, they argue, must be populated with cheap, modular systems that can be recombined at will—a drone that scouts today may become a communications relay tomorrow, a decoy the day after. Human commanders provide broad intent; algorithms assemble task forces out of whatever is nearby and networked. The orchestration is instantaneous and, ideally, untraceable. The army becomes a living network of interchangeable nodes, operating according to a combinatorial logic that rewards agility.

The relationship between AUNP 2.0 and Mosaic Warfare, while not explicitly stated in official documents, is evident in the technical requirements. Mosaic demands ‘seamless coordination across complex webs’ of distributed systems, impossible without the unified standards, data-centric architecture, and persistent connectivity that AUNP provides. When DARPA describes Mosaic as MDO ‘but faster,’ and the Army positions AUNP as the infrastructure ‘enabling MDO,’ the dependency becomes apparent even if unstated. Without the Unified Network, the mosaic would collapse back into fragments. But with it, a sensor in Africa can cue a strike in the Pacific, while analysis runs in Germany or Colorado. It is, in effect, the operationalization of the global nervous system described in the previous section.


D. Paradox of Resilience and Dependence

At the rhetorical level, Mosaic Warfare is presented as the epitome of resilience: a distributed force that cannot be decapitated, that survives by dispersing faster than it can be struck. Yet this resilience is itself paradoxical. Dependence on digital interfaces and machine coordination introduces new vulnerabilities. In this sense, Mosaic Warfare is an architecture of both paranoia and dependence: it extends the command network to every node precisely because it cannot trust any node to stand alone. Moreover, its underlying assumption —that adversaries are brittle, centralized, and incapable of adaptive recomposition —betrays the same civilizational lens of superiority that underpins the larger strategic worldview.


E. The Financialization of War

Its economic logic mirrors this dependence. The mosaic replaces the monumental procurement of the Cold War—the carrier, the bomber, the missile silo—with a continuous procurement of modular parts, software upgrades, and data services (as well as the data storage and rare earths needed for them). It is the financialization of war in literal form: violence as a subscription model, endlessly updatable, endlessly improvable, endlessly consumable. Attrition becomes affordable, even desirable, because what is destroyed can be replaced in the next production cycle.

There are, of course, limits. The faith in universal connectivity remains more aspirational than real. The seamless interoperability that DARPA envisions runs against the inertia of incompatible systems and the chronic insufficiency of industrial output. Expendable drones still need factories, and those factories still depend on global supply chains vulnerable to the very conflicts they enable. Yet these contradictions are precisely what make Mosaic Warfare such a revealing artifact of the age: it is both a symptom and a doctrine. It is a response to scarcity that imagines infinite recombination —a fantasy of control born of self-inflicted structural exhaustion.


F. From Doctrine to Governance: Toward the Continental Mosaic

If Mosaic Warfare represents the tactical expression of this emerging world order, then NATO’s internal planning turns that logic into policy. The next layer is administrative. It is in this bureaucratic zone, in alliance concepts, and national enablement plans that such networked lethality becomes a material reality and ultimately, continental governance.

Germany occupies a particularly symbolic place in this design. It serves as both conduit and capacitor: a logistical hub for transatlantic mobility, a data node in NATO’s digital nervous system, and the industrial core around which European interoperability is organized. Through initiatives like Operationsplan Deutschland, the country is being woven into a global command fabric. Part III will examine this transformation, binding the continent into the wider architecture of permanent contestation.


Quotation from Ursula M. Franklin’s The Real World of Technology (1990) describing technology as a system of organization and mindset rather than a collection of artifacts.
Ursula M. Franklin, The Real World of Technology (1990): “Technology is not the sum of the artifacts. Technology is a system. Technology involves organization, procedures, symbols, new words, equations, and, most all, a mindset.”

Closing Note: Transition to Part III

The operating system is now visible. Strategic ambiguity operates as a temporal weapon, trying to compress the perceived adversary’s decision cycles while extending Western strategic latitude by creating deliberate uncertainty, both on the military as well as on the diplomatic level. The Army Unified Network Plan 2.0 constructs a planetary information infrastructure, treating every digital interaction as potential military terrain. Multi-Domain Operations codifies permanent engagement across domains as a doctrinal baseline, assuming that adversaries do not understand the concept of peace. On the battlefield, Mosaic Warfare tries to substitute technological complexity for industrial capacity that deindustrialization destroyed.

Each element appears technical, defensive, and maybe even innovative. However, assembled, they constitute infrastructure for what the U.S. Army explicitly terms “transregional and global” warfare, the militarization of planetary existence. Ultimately, these processes constitute a grand, desperate spatial fix for a hegemony in decline: an attempt to resolve insoluble economic and political contradictions through the militarization of all space, digital and physical.

Last but not least, one could argue that this is an occupation of connectivity itself. The “interoperability” so prized by planners is the mechanism of this enmeshment, locking allies and infrastructures into a US-centric technological ecosystem from which decoupling could mean operational suicide.

Lastly, all of this architecture requires physical space and cognitive justification. Networks need nodes. Doctrines need believers. On planet Earth, global systems need continental hubs.

Part III will examine both dimensions:

Germany as network node: How the Operationsplan Deutschland, Joint Support and Enabling Command, Rheinmetall’s privatized logistics, and the 56th Theater Multi-Domain Command transform European territory into essential infrastructure for US-coordinated operations Germany hosts but cannot control.

NATO’s psychological reasoning: How the Alliance’s own “Four Worlds” scenario planning embraces “Pervasive Competition” as inevitable. Elite anxiety, in essence, was written down into a doctrinal document.

The machinery documented in Part II operates somewhere, justified by something. Part III examines how implementation proceeds, who profits from permanent mobilization, and what cognitive frameworks prevent ruling elites from choosing alternatives that material conditions increasingly demand.


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