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Land Warfare Studies Centre
 Working Paper No. 132
SQUARE PEGS FOR ROUND HOLES:
 
CURRENT APPROACHES TO FUTURE WARFARE AND THE NEED TO ADAPT
by 
Brigadier Michael G. Krause
 June 2007
 
 
 ii
© Commonwealth of Australia 2007
 This work is copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of study, research, criticism or review (as permitted under the
Copyright Act 1968 
 ), and with standard source credit included, no part may bereproduced by any process without written permission.
National Library of Australia Cataloguing-In-Publication Entry
Krause, Michael G.Square pegs for round holes : current approaches to future warfare and the need to adapt.ISBN 9780642296511.ISBN 0 642 29651 0.1. Asymmetric warfare. 2. Nuclear warfare. 3. Military art and science. 4. Military policy. 5. Operationalreadiness (Military science). I. Land Warfare StudiesCentre (Australia). II. Title. (Series : Working paper(Land Warfare Studies Centre (Australia)) ; no. 132).355.02
Land Warfare Studies Centre Working Papers
ISSN 1441-0389
 Working papers produced by the Land Warfare Studies Centre are vehiclesfor initiating, encouraging or nurturing professional discussion and debateconcerning the application of land warfare concepts and capabilities to thesecurity of Australia and its interests. Working papers, by their nature, arenot intended to be definitive.
Series Editor:
 
Scott Hopkins 
 
iii
 About the Author
Michael Krause is a serving senior officer in the Australian Army. Bornin Melbourne, he is a graduate of the Royal Military College, Duntroon,the Australian Command and Staff College and the Royal College of Defence Studies. He is an Armoured Corps Officer with experiencecommanding at the troop and squadron level, and 2nd Cavalry Regiment in 2000–01. He has served on operations in Iraq and theSolomon Islands and has served in various staff appointmentsincluding as the inaugural Chief Staff Officer (Operations) to the Vice Chief of the Defence Force. He has previously contributed to the
 Australian Army Journal 
and was the winner of the 2006 Chauvel Essay Prize with his essay 
‘The Case for Minimum-mass Tactics in the Australian Army’
.
 Acknowledgements
 The author gratefully acknowledges the staff and members at the RoyalCollege of Defence Studies 2006 for providing advice and commentduring the development of this paper, especially those devotedmembers of the Study Group.
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