Digests

CHACR Digest #29

CHACR Digest #28

CHACR Digest #27

CHACR Digest #26

CHACR Digest #25

Commentaries

Lost in translation?

Using and mis-using history

Polycrisis: The new normal

War’s final frontier?

In-Depth Briefings

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Ares & Athena – Issue 24 – Agile procurement

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“We need to ensure we have a common understanding about our priorities in order to present a consistent narrative around why adapting our procurement...
Battle of Irpin River

The British Army Review 187 – The Battle of Irpin River

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"Some of the most remarkable stories are of those who were civilians on the 23rd February 2022 and who volunteered to fight on the...

Interview: Chris Lincoln-Jones

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Former Royal Artillery officer-turned-author Christopher Lincoln-Jones talks to the CHACR about the evolution of drone technologies and the risk and rewards of the military's embrace...
The Western Front Vol1

Western Front Battlefield Guide

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Today’s visitor to the Western Front sees a landscape that has been permanently changed by the fighting of the First World War. The signs...

The British Army Review is the Army’s own professional journal and is intended to provide a forum for the discussion of all matters of professional interest to the soldier. Articles are invited from all ranks and from others having a special knowledge of or interest in military affairs.

The views expressed in all the products, articles and papers produced by the CHACR are always those of the various authors, and thus not a reflection of any officially held view, be it of the British Army or wider Defence or Government.

The chief purpose of the CHACR is to gather and present a wide range of views and perspectives to inform the Army, contributing to decisions concerning future strategy, concepts, capability and operations. The CHACR’s primary activity is to study the enduring nature and changing character of conflict on land by conducting a systematic programme of research and analysis into past and current (and possible future) operations.

It also acts as a hub for engagement with academics and think-tanks, and for promoting internal study of the profession of arms, thereby helping to enhance the Army’s ‘conceptual component’. In this role the CHACR acts as a forum for debate on matters relevant to the Army, enabling military personnel and other experts to express their views freely and securely. It also supports an array of conceptual activities, ranging from staff rides and battlefield studies to the editorship of the British Army’s internal professional journal, The British Army Review.

In all of the above roles the CHACR acts not just as a champion for individual ‘soldier-scholars’, but as a catalyst for the promotion of a ‘brains-based’ approach throughout the Army. In short, the CHACR promotes the notion that it is as important to ensure that an army is not out-thought as it is to ensure that it is not out-fought.

The independence and objectivity of the CHACR enables it to fulfil a critical analysis role, challenging conventional wisdom and testing evolving concepts and proposed plans.