While researching the history of cyberwar I found this list containing a lot of references about information war and cyberwar during the first high-tide of this topic during the 1990s. Feel free to use it. Thanks to whoever facilitated this list.
Pre-1997 Infowar Reference List
1. . „Air Force Web Site Shut Down As Hackers Gain Access, Change Files.“ The Wall Street Journal, dec 31, 1996, p. 10.
2. „Black Boxes Rule… OK?“ Jane’s Defence Systems Modernization 9, no. 2 (1996): 5.
3. „C4ISR in Concert.“ Jane’s Defence Weekly 26, no. 10 (1996): 61.
4. Communications Law – Compilation of Selected Acts Within the Jurisdiction of the Committee on Commerce. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1995.
5. „Dawn of Information Age Will Change Military More Than Cold War’s End.“ Aerospace Daily 174 (1995): 325.
6. . „Defence in the 21st Century.“ The Economist, 5 September 1992, pp. 3-22.
7. „Digitized Zypher Lifting Fog From No Man’s Land: Army Pushes Information Warfare Transition.“ National Defense 80, no. 510 (1995): 32-33.
8. „EW Expands into Information Warfare.“ Aviation Week and Space Technology 141 (1994): 47-48.
9. „For the First Time, Copernicus Architecture Addresses Information Warfare.“ Aerospace Daily 174 (1995): 392.
10. „Going Beyond Real Time: the Next Step in Simulation.“ Aviation Week and Space Technology 141 (1994): 71.
11. „Information Warriors Raze Enemy’s Vital Data Chains.“ National Defense 79 (1995): 30-31.
12. „New US Naval System „Effective and Suitable“.“ Jane’s Defence Weekly 26, no. 10 (1996): 69.
13. „Risk Management Provides Vital Information Security.“ Signal 49 (1994): 25-28.
14. „Shipborne Systems Come Off-the-Shelf.“ Jane’s Defence Weekly 25, no. 4 (1996): 30.
15. . „The Softwar Revolution.“ The Economist, 10 June 1995, pp. 5-20.
16. „US Translator That Speaks the Language.“ Jane’s Defence Weekly 26, no. 2 (1996): 42.
17. „Virtual Reality Helps Build Frigate Bridge.“ Jane’s Defence Weekly 25, no. 24 (1996): 45.
18. „Vision 2020.“ Jane’s Defence Weekly 23, no. 23 (1995): 29-55.
19. Abel, Dawn. „Simulated War Games Evolve to Enable Combat Exercises.“ Signal 44, no. 11 (1990): 45-47.
20. Ackerman, Robert K. „Advanced Information Systems Impel Operational Technologies: Research Agency Provides a Charge to New Electronics Systems Ranging From Thoughtful Sensors to Faithful Computer Simulations.“ Signal 50 (1996): 41-43.
21. ———. „Businesses Face Threat of Information Warfare.“ Signal 50 (1996): 45-46.
22. ———. „Military Planners Gird for Information Revolution: the Joint Staff Envisions a Future Where Implementing New Technologies Is an Essential Part of Force Definition.“ Signal 49 (1995): 71-76.
23. ———. „Vital Intelligence Technologies Converge on Information Systems: Sharing Timely Data Across the Community Requires a Coherent Strategy for Implementing Edge Electronics.“ Signal 50 (1996): 35-37.
24. Adam, John A., and Glen Zorpette. „Gulf Legacy.“ IEEE Spectrum 28 (1991): entire issue.
25. Adams, David, and others. „The Public Switched Network: an Overview and Vulnerability Assessment.“ Air Command and Staff College, 1995.
26. Adams, James. „The Role of the Media.“ Ethnic Conflict and Regional Instability: Implications for US Policy and Army Roles and Missions. editors Robert L. Pfaltzgraff, and Richard H. Shultz, 161-69. Carlisle Barracks, PA: US Army War College, 1994.
27. Adcock, Ken, Marilyn M. Helms, and Kenny Jih Wen-Jang. „Information Technology: Can It Provide a Sustainable Competitive Advantage?“ Information Strategy 9, no. 3 (1993): 10-15.
28. Aftergood, Steven. „The Soft-Kill Fallacy.“ Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists 50 (1994): 40-45.
29. Albano do Amarante, Jose Carlos. „The Automated Battle: a Feasible Dream?“ Military Review 74 (1994): 58-61.
30. Alberts, David S. Defensive Information Warfare. Washington, DC: National Defense University Press, 1996.
31. ———. Defensive Information Warfare. Washington, DC: National Defense University, 1996.
32. ———. The Unintended Consequences of Information Age Technologies. Washington, DC: National Defense University Press, 1996.
33. Aldrich, Richard W. The International Legal Implications of Information Warfare. Colorado Springs, CO: Institute for National Security Studies, 1996.
34. Alexander, David. „Information Warfare and the Digitized Battlefield.“ Military Technology 19, no. 9 (1995): 57-59+.
35. Alexander, John B. „Antimaterial Technology.“ Military Review 69 (1989): 29-41.
36. Alexander, John. B. „Non-Lethal Defense: a Comprehensive Defense Strategy Providing Commanders New Options.“SpaceCast 2020.
37. Alger, John I. „Declaring Information War: Early Training Crucial to Awareness.“ International Defense Review 29, no. 7 (1996): 54.
38. ———. „Declaring Information Warfare.“ Jane’s International Defence Review 29 (1996): 54-55.
39. Allard, C. Kenneth. Command, Control, and the Common Defense. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1990.
40. ———. „The Future of Command and Control: Toward a Paradigm of Information Warfare.“ Turning Point: The Gulf War and U.S. Military Strategy. editors L. Benjamine Ederington, and Michael J. Mazarr, 161-92. Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1995.
41. Allard, Kenneth. „Data Transforms Warfare: IW Poses New Challenges to Corporate Culture.“ Defense News 9, no. 24 (3003).
42. Allison, Graham T. Essence of Decision. New Haven, CT: Harper Collins, 1971.
43. Arnett, Eric H. „Welcome to Hyperwar.“ Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists 48, no. 7 (1992): 14-21.
44. Arnnett, Robert L., and Mary C. FitzGerald. „Restructuring the Armed Forces: the Current Soviet Debate.“ Journal of Soviet Military Studies 3, no. 2 (1990): 193-220.
45. Arquilla, John. „The Strategic Implications of Information Dominance.“ Strategic Review 22, no. 3 (1994): 24-30.
46. Arquilla, John, and David Ronfeldt. The Advent of Netwar. Santa Monica, CA: RAND, 1996.
47. ———. „Cyberwar Is Coming!“ Comparative Strategy 12 (1993): 141-65.
48. Arrow, Kenneth J. „Classificatory Notes on the Production and Transmission of Technological Knowledge.“ American Economic Review 59 (1969): 29-33.
49. ———. „Limited Knowledge and Economic Analysis.“ American Economic Review 64 (1974): 1-10.
50. Ayers, Robert L. „DISA and Information Warfare.“InfoWar Con 1995, H3-H58.
51. Barker, Patrick K. Avoiding Technology-Induced Delusions of Grandeur: Preparing the Air Force for an Information Warfare Environment. Colorado Springs, CO: Institute for National Security Studies, 1996.
52. Barlow, John P. „A Taxonomy of Information.“ Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists 20 (1994): 13-17.
53. “ Political Warfare and Psychological Operations: Rethinking the U.S. Approach, editors Frank R. Barnett, and Carnes Lord. Washington, DC: National Defense University Press, 1989.
54. Barnett, Jeffery R. Future War: an Assessment of Aerospace Campaigns in 2010. Maxwell AFB, AL: Air University Press, 1996.
55. Barnett, Jeffrey R. „The Revolution in Military Affairs.“SpaceCast 2020.
56. Barraclough, Geoffrey. „Eric Voegelin and the Theory of Imperialism.“ The Philosophy of Order: Essays on History, Consciousness and Politics. editors Peter J. Opitz, and Gregor Sebba, 173-89. Stuttgart, GE: Klett-Cotta, 1981.
57. Bean, Mark H. „Fourth Generation Warfare?“ Marine Corps Gazette 79, no. 3 (1995).
58. Beaumont, Roger A. The Nerves of War: Emerging Issues in and References to Command and Control. Washington, DC: AFCEA International Press, 1989.
59. Bell Communications Research. Generic Requirements for Data Communication Network Security. Bellcore, NJ: 1994.
60. “ Computers in Battle: Will They Work?, editors David Bellin, and Gary Chapman. Boston: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1987.
61. Bender, Brian. „Navy Chief Commissions Fleet Information Warfare Center.“ Defense Daily, 25 October 1995, pp. 108-9.
62. ———. „War on DoD’s Information Systems Continues to Escalate.“ Defense Daily, 20 October 1995, pp. 89-90.
63. Benedikt, Michael. Cyberspace: First Steps. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1991.
64. Beniger, James R. The Control Revolution: Technological and Economic Origins of the Information Society. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1986.
65. Berenson, Paul J. „Knowledge Based Warfare.“Annual AFCEA Computing Conference.
66. Bergman, Kenneth R. „Space and the Revolution in Military Affairs.“ Marine Corps Gazette 79, no. 5 (1995): 58-60.
67. Berkowitz, Bruce D. „Warfare in the Information Age.“ Issues in Science and Technology (1995): 59-66.
68. Betts, Richard. Surprise Attack. Washington, DC: The Brookings Institution, 1982.
69. Beyerchen, Alan. „Clausewitz, Nonlinearity, and the Unpredictability of War.“ International Studies 17, no. 3 (1992-1993): 59-90.
70. “ Fuzzy Models for Pattern Recognition: Methods That Search for Structures in Data, editors James C. Bezdek, and K. Pal Sankar. New York: IEEE, 1992.
71. Bickers, Charles. „Fighting on the EW Front.“ Jane’s Defence Weekly 23, no. 21 (1995): 31.
72. Bickers. Charles. „PJOCS Is Technology Base for UK’s Joint HQ.“ Jane’s Defence Weekly 25, no. 24 (1996): 46.
73. Biddle, Tami Davis. „Handling the Soviet Threat: „Project Control“ and the Debate on American Strategy in the Early Cold War Years.“ Journal of Strategic Studies 12, no. 3 (1989): 273-302.
74. Bielski, Tanya. „Air Force Chief Embraces Information Warfare.“ Defense Daily, 26 April 1995, pp. 125-26.
75. Billout, Guy. „Ask Me No Secrets, I’Ll Tell You No Lies.“ Security Management 38 (1994): 24-25+.
76. “ Communication in the Age of Virtual Reality, editors Frank Biocca, and Mark R. Levy. Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum, 1995.
77. Bishop, Peter C. „Knowing the Future.“Workshop on Futures Intelligence Methodologies.
78. ———. „Long-Term Forecasting.“2025 Study.
79. Bitzinger, Richard, and Bates Gill. Gearing Up for High-Tech Warfare? Chinese and Taiwanese Defense Modernization and Implications for Military Confrontation Across the Taiwan Strait, 1995-2005. Washington, DC: Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments, 1996.
80. Bjorklund, Raymond C. The Dollars and Sense of Command and Control. Ft.McNair, DC: National Defense University Press, 1995.
81. Black, Peter. „Soft Kill: Fighting Infrastructure Wars in the 21st Century.“ Wired 1, no. 3 (1993): 49-50.
82. “ A Sobering Look at the Contours of CyberspaceSteven K. Black. Ridgeway Viewpoints, 96-3. Pittsburg, PA: Ridgeway Center for International Studies, University of Pittsburg, 1996.
83. “ This Page Under Construction: Information Warfare in the Post-Cold War WorldSteven K. Black. Ridgeway Viewpoints, 96-1. Pittsburg, PA: Ridgeway Center for International Security Studies, University of Pittsburg, 1996.
84. Blair, David. „How to Defeat the United States: the Operational Military Effects of the Proliferation of Weapons of Precise Destruction.“ Fighting Proliferation: New Concerns for the Nineties. editor Henry Sokolski, 75-94. Maxwell AFB, AL: Air University Press, 1996.
85. Blank, Stephen J. Reform and the Revolution in Russian Defense Economics. Carlisle Barracks, PA: U.S. Army War College, 1995.
86. Blazer, Ernest. „Information Is the Best Weapon.“ Navy Times 43 (1994): 8.
87. Bleecker, Samuel E. „The Virtual Organization.“ The Futurist 28 (1994): 9-12+.
88. Blokzeyl-Roth, Kathleen M. „Preparing the Battlefield – Volant Solo Shoots „Electron Bullets“.“ Perspectives 8, no. 1 (1992): 1+.
89. Bloom, Richard W. „Propaganda and Active Measures.“ Handbook of Military Psychology. editors Reuven Gal, and A. David Mangelsdorff, 693-709. Chichester, UK: John Wiley & Sons, 1991.
90. Blount, Kerry A. „Two-Part Component Strategy for Winning the Information War.“ Army 45 (1995): 10-11.
91. ———. „Wrestling With Information Warfare’s Dark Side.“ Army 46 (1996): 9-12+.
92. Boar, Bernard H. The Art of Strategic Planning for Information Technology. New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1993.
93. Boatman, John. „ARPA Sharpen Up for Information Warfare.“ Jane’s Defence Weekly 24, no. 7 (1995): 5.
94. ———. „The Jane’s Interview: Larry Lynn (ARPA).“ Jane’s Defence Weekly 24, no. 10 (1995): 64.
95. Bodnar, John W. „Military-Technical Revolution: From Hardware to Information.“ Naval War College Review 46 (1993): 7-21.
96. Boorda, Jeremy M. „Leading the Revolution in C4I.“ Joint Force Quarterly , no. 9 (1995): 14-17.
97. Bowdish, Randall G. „The Revolution in Military Affairs: the Sixth Generation.“ Military Review 75, no. 6 (1995): 26-33.
98. Boyd, Morris J., and Michael Woodgerd. „Information Operations: Force XXI Operations.“ Military Review 74 (1994): 16-28.
99. Brandt, Daniel. „Infowar and Disinformation: From the Pentagon to the Net.“ NameBase Newsletter , no. 11 (1995).
100. Brewin, Bob, and Heather Harreld. „U.S. Sitting Duck, DOD Panel Predicts.“ Federal Computer Week 10, no. 33 (1996): 1, 32.
101. Brodie, Bernard. Strategy in the Missile Age. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1965.
102. Brodie, Ricchard. Virus of the Mind: the New Science of the Meme. Seattle, WA: Integral Press, 1996.
103. Brown, Anthony C. Bodyguard of Lies. New York: Harper Collins, 1975.
104. Brown, M. „Information Warfare.“Symposium Auswirkungen Neuer Waffentechnologien, 10-32Zentraler Forschungs-und Studienbereich: Amt für Studien und Übungen der Bundeswehr , 1996.
105. Buchan, Glenn. Information War and the Air Force: Wave of the Future? Current Fad?, RAND, 1996.
106. Builder, Carl H. The Icarus Syndrome: the Role of Air Power Theory in the Evolution and Fate of the U.S. Air Force. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 1994.
107. ———. Rethinking National Security and the Role of the Military. RAND Paper P-7943 ed. Santa Monica, CA: RAND, 1995.
108. Bunker, Robert J. „Advanced Battlespace and Cybermaneuver Concepts: Implications for Force XXI.“ Parameters 26, no. 3 (1996): 108-20.
109. ———. „Transition to Fourth Epoch War.“ Marine Corps Gazette 78 (1994): 20+.
110. Busey, James B. „Information Superiority Dashes Throny Power Projection Issues.“ Signal 49 (1994): 13.
111. ———. „Information Warfare Calculus Mandates Protective Action.“ Signal 49 (1994): 15.
112. ———. „Milstar Offers Tactical Information Dominance.“ Signal 48 (1994): 11.
113. Campbell, William H. „NTC to Test Digitization.“ Army 44 (1994): 34.
114. “ The First Information War, Contributing editor Alan D. Campen. Fairfax, VA: AFCEA International Press.
115. Campen, Alan D. „Information Warfare Is Rife With Promise, Peril.“ Signal , no. 48 (1993): 19-20.
116. ———. „Rush to Information-Based Warfare Gambles With National Security.“ Signal (1995): 67-69.
117. ———. „Vulnerability of Info Systems Demands Immediate Action: Reliance by Military on Commercial Communications Infrastructure Poses Significant Peril to United States.“ National Defense (1995): 26-27.
118. “ Cyberwar: Security, Strategy and Conflict in the Information Age, contributing editors Alan D. Campen, Douglas H. Dearth, and R. Thomas Gooden. Fairfax, VA: AFCEA International Press, 1996.
119. “ Developing Battlefield Technologies in the 1990s, editor Edwin R. Carlisle. McNair Papers, 21. Washington, DC: National Defense University, 1993.
120. Carlisle, Edwin R., ed. „Developing Battlefield Technologies in the 1990s.“. McNair Paper, 21. Washington, DC: National Defense University Press, 1997.
121. Casagrande, E. E. Ric. Non-Lethal Weapons: Implications for the RAAF, RAAF, Air Power Studies Centre, 1995.
122. Cassidy, Michael S. „SIGINT: an Important Part of Air Force Intelligence.“ American Intelligence Journal 15 (1994): 20.
123. “ Evolution of an Information Society, editor A. E. Cawkell. London: ASLIB, 1987.
124. Cebrowski, Arthur K., and Peter Pace. Information Warfare: a Strategy for Peace… the Decisive Edge in War. Washington, DC: The Joint Staff (J6K &J38), 1996.
125. Cetron, Marvin. An American Renaissance in the Year 2000. Bethesda, MD: World Future Society, 1994.
126. Chaisson, Kernan. „Navy Information Warfare Activity Formed.“ World Aerospace & Defense Intelligence , no. 687 (1994): 11.
127. Chantler, Nicholas. „Computer Hackers Brilliance: Above and Beyond Ethics? – What Do We Know About Them?“InfoWar Con 96, 3-37.
128. Cherry, W. Peter, and Glenn Otin. Concept Paper: Information Campaigns. Ann Arbor MI: Vector Research, Inc, 1991.
129. Cheswick, William, and Steven Bellovin. Firewalls and Internet Security: Repelling the Wily Hacker. Boston, MA: Addison-Wesley, 1994.
130. Chilcote, Richard A. Strategic Art: the New Disicipline for 21st Century Leaders. Carlisle Barracks, PA: U.S. Army War College, 1995.
131. Chisholm, Donald. Coordination Without Hierarchy: Informal Structures in Multiorganizational Systems. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1989.
132. Chizum, David G. Soviet Radioelectronic Combat. Boulder, CO: Westview, 1985.
133. Chotikul, Diane. „The Soviet Theory of Reflexive Control in Historical and Psychocultural Perspective.“ Naval Postgraduate School, 1986.
134. Clapes, Anthony L. Softwars: the Legal Battle for Control of the Global Software Industry. Westport, CT: Quorum Books, 1993.
135. Clapper, James R., and Eben H. Trevino. „Critical Security Dominates Information Warfare Moves.“ Signal 49, no. 7 (1995): 71-72.
136. “ C3I: Issues of Command and Control, editor Thomas P. Coakley. Washington, DC: National Defense University Press, 1991.
137. Coakley, Thomas P. Command and Control for War and Peace. Washington, DC: National Defense University Press, 1992.
138. Codevilla, A. Informing Statecraft: Intelligence for the New Century. New York: Free Press, 1992.
139. Coe, Gary Q. „Modeling Processes Offer Command and Control Aids.“ Signal 48 (1993): 67-69.
140. Cohen, Eliot A. „A Revolution in Warfare.“ Foreign Affairs 75, no. 2 (1996): 37-54.
141. Cohen, Frederick B. Protection and Security on the Information Superhighway. New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1995.
142. Collins, John M. Military Roles and Missions: a Framework for Review. Washington, DC: Congressional Research Office, 1995.
143. Colucci, Frank. „Using Data As a Weapon.“ Rotor & Wing 28 (1994): 23-27.
144. Constance, Paul. „From Bombs to Bytes: Era of on-Line Weaponry Is Here.“ Government Computer News 14 (1995): 51.
145. Cook, Nick. „VR: Even Better Than the Real Thing.“ Jane’s Defence Weekly 21 (1994): 24-25.
146. Cook, Wyatt C. „Information Warfare: a New Dimension in the Application of Air and Space Power.“ Air War College, 1993.
147. Cooper, Jeffrey R. Another View of the Revolution in Military Affairs. Carlisle Barracks, PA: U.S. Army War College, 1994.
148. Cooper, Pat. „Computers May Guide U.S. War Plans.“ Defense News 11, no. 9 (1996): 28-29.
149. ———. „DoD Directive Links Info War Intelligence, Operations.“ Defense News 11, no. 41 (1996): 84.
150. ———. „In Cyberspace, US Confronts an Illusive Foe: Hackers Offer Nefarious Threats to Computer Networks.“ Defense News 10 (1995): 1+.
151. ———. „Information Warfare Operations Require Intelligence Boost.“ Defense News 11, no. 36 (1996): 16.
152. ———. „Information Whizzes to Advise DoD on Future War.“ Defense News 11, no. 8 (1996): 14.
153. ———. „IW Study May Guide U.S. Policy.“ Defense News 11, no. 12 (1996): 39.
154. ———. „New Center to Coordinate Future DoD Data Systems.“ Defense News 11, no. 41 (1996): 74.
155. ———. „Newest Information Warfare Technology Could Backfire on the Battlefield.“ Defense News 11, no. 18 (1996): 26.
156. ———. „Pentagon Debates Potential of Information War.“ Defense News 11 (1996): 3+.
157. ———. „Pentagon Debates Potential of Information Warfare.“ Defense News 11, no. 19 (1996): 3+.
158. ———. „Pentagon Eyes Ways to Counter Commercially Available Threats.“ Defense News 11, no. 32 (1996): 18.
159. ———. „U.S. Army Seeks Computer Antivirus Plan.“ Defense News 11, no. 34 (1996): 23.
160. ———. „U.S. Lawmakers Examine Vulnerability of Internet.“ Defense News 11, no. 21 (1996): 3+.
161. ———. „U.S. Stealth Enhancements Are Key to „Air Occupation“.“ Defense News 11, no. 37 (Sept 16-22): 1+.
162. ———. „War Game Reveals IW Vulnerabilities.“ Defense News 11, no. 9 (1996): 33.
163. Cooper, Pat, and Robert Holzer. „America Lacks Reaction Plan for Info War.“ Defense News 10 (1995): 3+.
164. Cooper, Pat, and Frank Oliveri. „Air Force Carves Operational Edge in Info Warfare.“ Defense News 10 (1995): 1+.
165. Cordesman, Anthony H. Compensating for Smaller Forces: Adjusting Ways and Means Through Technology. Carlisle Barracks, PA: U.S. Army War College, 1992.
166. Cruce, Andrew C. „Simulation Technology Making Rapid Advances.“ Defense Electronics 25 (1993): 48-51.
167. Curtis, Ian G. S. „Misinformed About Information Warfare? the Three-Wave Theory Is Under Fire.“ Defense & Foreign Affairs Strategic Policy 24, no. 3 (1996): 4-5.
168. Czerwinski, Thomas J. „Command and Control at the Crossroads.“ Parameters 26, no. 3 (1996): 121-32.
169. ———. „The Third Wave: What the Tofflers Never Told You.“ Strategic Forum , no. 72 (1996): 1-4.
170. Davidow, William H., and Michael S. Malone. The Virtual Corporation. New York: Harper Collins, 1992.
171. de Caro, Chuck. „Softwar: Sats, Lies, and Video Rape.“InfoWar Con 96, Sect.A3, 3-14.
172. De Landa, Manuel. War in the Age of Intelligent Machines. New York: Zone, 1991.
173. Dean, David J. „Project Control: Creative Strategic Thinking at Air University.“ Air University Review 35, no. 5 (1984): 22-31.
174. Debban, Alan W. „Disabling Systems: War-Fighting Option for the Future.“ Airpower Journal 7, no. 1 (1993): 44-50.
175. Defense Information Systems Agency. Defense Information Infrastructure Master Plan – Version 2.0. Arlington, VA: Government Printing Office, 1995.
176. Defense Science Board. Report of the Defense Science Board Summer Study Task Force on Information Architecture for the Battlefield. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1994.
177. DeGroat, Arthur S. „Information and Combat Power on the Force XXI Battlefield.“ Military Review 75 (1995): 56-62.
178. DeGroat Arthur S., and Michael J. Stagoski. „Mounted Battle Command in the Information Age.“ Army 44 (1994): 10-14.
179. “ Computers Under Attack: Intruders, Worms and Viruses, editor Peter J. Denning. New York: ACM Press, 1990.
180. Department of Commerce. Global Information Infrastructure: Agenda for Cooperation. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1995.
181. Department of the Navy . Copernicus…Forward C4I for the 21st Century. Washington, DC: Government Pronting Office, 1995.
182. Devereaux, Christopher. „Combat Leadership and the Media.“ U.S. Naval Institute Proceedings 121, no. 7 (1995): 62-65.
183. Dick, Charles. „Russian Views on Future War – Part One.“ Jane’s Intelligence Review 5 (1993): 390-392.
184. ———. „Russian Views on Future War – Part Three.“ Jane’s Intelligence Review 5 (1993): 488-95.
185. ———. „Russian Views on Future War – Part Two.“ Jane’s Intelligence Review 5 (1993): 451-53.
186. Dishong, Donald J. On Studying the Effect of Information Warfare on C2 Decision Making. Monterey, CA: Naval Postgraduate School, 1994.
187. “ The Military Landscape: Mathematical Models of Combat, editors John T. Dockery, and A. E. R. Woodcock. Cambridge, UK: Woodhead, 1993.
188. Donnelly, John. „Research Agency Gears Up for Information Warfare.“ Defense Week 16 (1995): 5+.
189. Downs, Lawrence G. „Digital Data Warfare: Using Malicious Computer Code As a Weapon.“ Air War College, 1995.
190. “ New Information Infrastructure: Strategies for U.S. Policy, editor William J. Drake. New York: Twentieth Century Fund Press, 1995.
191. Drucker, Peter. Post-Capitalist Society. New York: Harper Collins, 1993.
192. Dunlap, Charles J. „How We Lost the High-Tech War of 2007.“ The Weekly Standard 1, no. 19 (1996): 22-28.
193. Echevarria, Antulio, and John M. Shaw. „The New Military Revolution: Post-Industrial Change.“ Parameters 22 (1992-1993): 70-79.
194. Ederington, L. Benjamin, and Michael J. Mazaar. Turning Point: the Gulf War and U.S. Military Strategy. Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1994.
195. Emmett, Peter C. „Information Mania: a New Manifestation of Gulf War Syndrome, Part One.“ Air Clues 50, no. 6 (1996): 204-7.
196. ———. „Information Mania: a New Manifestation of Gulf War Syndrome, Part Two.“ Air Clues 50, no. 7 (1966): 244-48.
197. ———. „Software Warfare: the Emerging Future.“ RUSI Journal 137, no. 6 (1992): 56-60.
198. ———. „Software Warfare: the Militarization of Logic.“ Joint Force Quarterly , no. 5 (1994): 84-90.
199. Engelbrecht, Joseph A. „War Termination: Why Does a State Decide to Stop Fighting?“ Columbia University, 1992.
200. Evancoe, Paul. „Tomorrow’s Weapons of Choice.“ Military Technology 18 (1994): 68-71.
201. Evancoe, Paul R., and Mark Bentley. „Computer Viruses Loom As Future Era Weapons.“ National Defense 78 (1994): 19+.
202. ———. „CVW – Computer Virus As a Weapon.“ Military Technology 18 (1994): 38-40.
203. Evers, Stacey. „C4ISR Challenges the Cream of US Defence.“ Jane’s Defence Weekly 26, no. 10 (1996): 61.
204. ———. „Data Fusion Gives F-22 Pilots the Big Picture.“ Jane’s Defence Weekly 26, no. 2 (1996): 41.
205. ———. „Information Worth a Thousand Passes.“ Jane’s Defence Weekly 25, no. 20 (1996): 32.
206. ———. „The Jane’s Interview: Barry Horton (ASDC3I).“ Jane’s Defence Weekly 25, no. 15 (1996): 32.
207. ———. „Stopping the Hacking of Cyber Information.“ Jane’s Defence Weekly 25 (1996): 22-25.
208. ———. „Stopping the Hacking of Cyber Information.“ Jane’s Defence Weekly 25, no. 15 (1996): 22.
209. ———. „US Navy Commissions New Information Centre.“ Jane’s Defence Weekly 25, no. 18 (1995): 11.
210. ———. „USAF Uses CUBE to Solve C2 Problems.“ Jane’s Defence Weekly 25, no. 12 (1996): 19.
211. Eward, Ronald S. „The Vulnerabilities of a Global Electronic Economy.“Infowar Con 96, Sect. A2, 3-48.
212. “ Information Technology, editor Edward A. Feigenbaum. New World Vistas: Air and Space Power for the 21st Century, Gene H. McCall. Washington, DC: Scientific Advisory Board, 1995.
213. Feigenbaum, Edward A. „The Intelligent Use of Machine Intelligence.“ CrossTalk (1995): 10-13.
214. Felker, Ed. „Information Warfare: a View of the Future.“ A Common Perspective 3, no. 2 (1995): 17-18.
215. Felker, Edward J. Oz Revisited: Russian Military Doctrinal Reform in the Light of Their Analysis of Desert Storm. Maxwell AFB, AL: School of Advanced Airpower Studies, 1995.
216. Ferster, Warren. „Israelis Pressure U.S. for Imagery Restriction.“ Defense News 11, no. 24 (1996): 1+.
217. FitzGerald, Mary C. „Advanced Conventional Munitions and Moscow’s Defensive Force Posture.“ Defense Analysis 6, no. 2 (1990): 167-91.
218. ———. The Impact of the Military-Technical Revolution on Russian Military Affairs, 2 Vols., MDA903-91-C-0190. Herman Kahn Center, Indianapolis, IN, 1993.
219. ———. The New Russian Revolution in Military Affairs. London, UK: Royal United Services Institute for Defence Studies, 1994.
220. ———. „Russia’s New Military Doctrine.“ RUSI Journal 137 (1992): 40-48.
221. ———. „The Russian Image of Future War.“ Comparative Strategy 13 (1994): 167-80.
222. ———. „The Russian Military’s Strategy for „Sixth Generation“ Warfare.“ Orbis 38, no. 3 (1994): 457-76.
223. ———. „Russian Views on Electronic Signals and Information Warfare.“ American Intelligence Journal 15 (1994): 81-87.
224. ———. „Russian Views on Information Warfare.“ Army 44 (1994): 57-58+.
225. ———. „The Soviet Image of Future War: „Through the Prism of the Persian Gulf“.“ Comparative Strategy 10 (1991): 393-435.
226. Fitzsimonds, James R., and Jan M. VanTol. „Revolutions in Military Affairs.“ Joint Force Quarterly , no. 4 (1994): 24-31.
227. Fogleman, Ronald R. „The Fifth Dimension of Warfare.“Armed Forces and Communications Association.
228. ———. „Fundamentals of Information Warfare: an Airman’s View.“NDU/NSIA Global Information Explosion Conference .
229. Fogleman, Ronald R., Chief of Staff, USAF, and Sheila E. Widnall, Secretary of the Air Force. Cornerstones of Information Warfare.1995.
230. Fox, Terrance M. „Closing the Media-Military Technology Gap.“ Military Review 75, no. 6 (1995): 10-16.
231. Fracker, Martin L. „Cognitive Engineering for Information Dominance.“USAF 2025.
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