Talk:Sigma war games
This is the talk page for discussing improvements to the Sigma war games article. This is not a forum for general discussion of the article's subject. |
Article policies
|
Find sources: Google (books · news · scholar · free images · WP refs) · FENS · JSTOR · TWL |
This article is written in American English, which has its own spelling conventions (color, defense, traveled) and some terms that are used in it may be different or absent from other varieties of English. According to the relevant style guide, this should not be changed without broad consensus. |
A fact from Sigma war games appeared on Wikipedia's Main Page in the Did you know column on 17 December 2014 (check views). The text of the entry was as follows:
|
This article is rated B-class on Wikipedia's content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Secret environment
[edit]Virtually every paragraph of this article includes "secretly", "secretive" and similar words. The fact is that war games conducted by the US military and other organizations involved in security planning for the purpose of evaluating different courses of action are normally conducted in a classified (i.e., secret) environment. This is for a variety of reasons: the assumptions on which they are founded may be inflammatory (e.g. that certain allies will be unreliable, or that certain countries will be aggressors), they may provide insight into actual U.S. plans (e.g. that certain key terrain or forces are essential to a plan's success), or they may produce results that are unpleasant to hear or that contradict elements of U.S. policy (e.g. that certain countries are undefendable). This is true not only of the U.S., but most other countries as well. I'm going to go ahead and reduce the frequency of the statement, in favor of a sentence up front that makes it clear.Darkstar8799 (talk) 21:14, 17 December 2014 (UTC)
Game mechanics
[edit]I find the topic very interesting. Is there more info about the actual game mechanics?
On a side note: the most fascinating thing about these war games is perhaps not the fact they turned out to be prophetic - it is the fact that the US leadership kept ignoring the outcomes of these games, yet kept running them. What's the purpose of doing something if you don't trust the results? GregorB (talk) 15:22, 7 December 2014 (UTC)
- Wikipedia articles that use American English
- Wikipedia Did you know articles
- B-Class military history articles
- B-Class Asian military history articles
- Asian military history task force articles
- B-Class North American military history articles
- North American military history task force articles
- B-Class Southeast Asian military history articles
- Southeast Asian military history task force articles
- B-Class United States military history articles
- United States military history task force articles
- B-Class Cold War articles
- Cold War task force articles
- B-Class Southeast Asia articles
- Mid-importance Southeast Asia articles
- WikiProject Southeast Asia articles