From Christopher Ellis, Strategy Bridge: “Starting small, there are numerous models to depict the makeup of a person. Examples include the Eight Dimensions of Wellness, the Elements of Wellness, the Wellness Wheel, and for the Army’s Comprehensive Soldier and Family Fitness: the Five Dimensions of Strength. With some variation and expansion in these models, the dimensions are: social, physical, intellectual, emotional, and spiritual.”
From Paul Scharre & Lauren Fish, CNAS: “Military power is not organic or constant. It requires investment, innovation, and maintenance. Deploying military power degrades it and requires later revitalization. Adversaries adapt to the most advanced equipment and effective tactics. New threats emerge while old ones wane. Military leverage stems from warfighting advantage, which encompasses two simultaneous requirements: the ability to project military power abroad and to protect the U.S. homeland."
Sequestration Damages Military's Trust of Political Leaders
From Jacqueline Klimas, Washington Examiner: “A new study on military families released Thursday found that sequestration is more than just a Washington buzzword. More than a quarter of the troops, family members and veterans who responded to the Blue Star Families 2016 Military Family Lifestyle Survey said they "felt changes in benefits, budget cuts and sequestration illustrated that commitments are not being kept for those who serve." Only 19 percent of military families say they would recommend serving in the military to others "if the current trend of cutting benefits continues.""