Alex P. Schmid said that fifth-generation warfare is typified by its "omnipresent battlefield", and the fact that people engaged in it do not necessarily use military force, instead employing a mixture of kinetic and non-kinetic force. In the 1999 book
Unrestricted Warfare, by colonels
Qiao Liang and
Wang Xiangsui of the
People's Liberation Army, they noted that in the years since the 1991
Gulf War, conventional military violence had decreased, which correlated to an increase in "political, economic, and technological violence", which they argued could be more devastating than a conventional war. In Unrestricted Warfare, the authors also write "
No, what we are referring to are not changes in the instruments of war, the technology of war, the modes of war, or the forms of war. What we are referring to is the function of warfare". Additionally, a very short paper published by the
think tank 360iSR mentions that “
We are no longer fighting a defined adversary in a defined battlespace for a defined period of time. Instead the 5th generation mission space is a continuous global battle of narratives that will play out over both virtual and physical space and encompass a range of violent and non-violent actions and effects." In 2009, an article in the
Marine Corps Gazette written by Lt Col Stanton S. Coerr described the symptoms of fifth-generation warfare as "''The battlefield will be something strange- cyberspace, or the Cleveland water supply, or Wall Street's banking systems, or YouTube. The mission will be instilling fear, and it will succeed.''" L.C. Rees described the nature of fifth generation warfare as difficult to define in itself, alluding to
the third law of science fiction author
Arthur C. Clarke – "any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic." Fifth-generation warfare has been characterized as potentially containing the following characteristics: • Cyber attacks that may not be attributable to an actor or nation-state, or even be recognised as such by outsiders (simply being perceived as 'outages'), • Social engineering via techniques such as
gaslighting used to manipulate targets into thinking in a way the belligerents desire, • Spontaneous conflicts with no clear build-up to outsiders that may not make sense, • And attacks by non-state actors; rather than terrorist groups which make up part of
4GW, non-state actors in 5GW can also mean private
corporations. == See also ==