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d-20488House OversightOther

Essay on tactical, operational, and strategic levels with historical examples

The passage is a theoretical discussion of policy implementation levels with historical references. It contains no concrete allegations, names, transactions, or actionable leads involving powerful act Distinguishes tactical, operational, and strategic decision‑making. Cites MacArthur’s Incheon landing as an operational example. References Google data‑center architecture as a modern operational exa

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #018276
Pages
1
Persons
0
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage is a theoretical discussion of policy implementation levels with historical references. It contains no concrete allegations, names, transactions, or actionable leads involving powerful act Distinguishes tactical, operational, and strategic decision‑making. Cites MacArthur’s Incheon landing as an operational example. References Google data‑center architecture as a modern operational exa

Tags

policy-analysismilitary-strategyhouse-oversighttechnology-infrastructure

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Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
usually talk about “tactical”, “operational” and “strategic” levels as we watch the gears of history churning away in war and peace. The “tactical” level is the most practical. It’s the choice to use machine guns instead of tanks to secure a street in Kabul, for instance, or to buy up gold for a central bank or permit high-frequency stock trading. Tactics are where policy decisions crunch into reality. The most brutal shocks are first felt tactically: roadside bombs or mis-designed, crashing computer code. A level above the problem of tactics sits the question of operations. It’s here where decisions are made about just how various levers of power might best be moved. Should we send bombers to slow Iranian proliferation or rely on cyber attacks? Will tax dollars fix our infrastructure faster than tolls? Macarthur’s landing by surprise in Incheon on the morning of September 15, 1950, Operation Chromite, was an operational decision. “Within five hours, 40,000 men would act boldly, in the hope that 100,000 others manning the defense lines of South Korea would not die," he thought before the battle. “I alone was responsible for tomorrow, and if I failed, the dreadful results would rest on judgment day against my soul.”52 Policy gets implemented through operations. It is the level where clever bureaucrats and parasitic office politicians prey, where they can most easily undermine the ambitions of visionaries. But it is also the place where inspiration works on the will and passion of companies or armies or research labs. Server farms, data mining algorithms, trade treaties—these are the operational chessboards of our era. Operations is where the bolt tightening for revolutionary change occurs. It is intense, relentless operations that ensure stability in the face of shock or growth or collapse. “The exploding popularity of Internet services has created a new class of computing systems that we have named warehouse-scale computers,” the Google data engineers Luiz Andre Barosso and Urs Holzle wrote in famous, revolutionary paper several years ago as they described the operational revolution that lets Google serve terabytes of data, instantly, every day.*? The massive data centers they had built, they realized, are so large that they are nothing less than computers that are the size of massive buildings. Solar fields are their power supply; entire rivers are their cooling tubes. And they enable nothing less than magic: instant knowledge, connection to distant lands, a constant picture of what humanity knows. This is the growing, heroic scale of operations now. Above the operational and tactical levels is what we call the strategic dimension. It is here where overall design is considered and moved. Without it, operations and tactics are incoherent. Strategy imagines how whole structures like nations or and Felix Gilbert, eds., Makers of Modern Strategy: From Machiavelli to the Nuclear Age (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1986) and Sun Tzu, “The Art of War”, Filiquarian (1986) 52 “Within five hours”: Douglas MacArthur, Reminiscenes (Naval Institute Press, 1964), 354 53 “The exploding popularity”: Luiz André Barroso and Urs Holzle, The Data-Center as a Computer (San Rafael: Morgan & Claypool, 2009) 44

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