# Frontline Logistics: War, Business, and the Problem of Mutual Understanding I...
Canonical: https://social-archive.org/jo67/GXtGePnd5w
Original URL: https://www.linkedin.com/posts/rem-frolov-a7b819309_frontline-logistics-war-business-and-the-activity-7449830899640139797-qota
Author: Rem Frolov
Platform: linkedin
## Content
Frontline Logistics: War, Business, and the Problem of Mutual Understanding I am currently working on a project that addresses a fundamental problem of modern warfare: frontline logistics in the kill zone. This is a distributed field logistics concept, and I believe there is a viable way to solve it. However, during implementation, it became clear that the problem is more complex than initially expected. The key challenges include: supply chain vulnerability in contested environments scalability under continuous disruption adaptation to rapidly changing conditions minimization of cargo handling to reduce personnel exposure At its core, the problem exists across two fundamentally different realities: combat and business. Field reality: highly dynamic, high-risk environment immediate consequences of failure need for adaptability, redundancy, and resilience system performance measured by continuity under stress Business reality: linear, product-centric thinking focus on individual components rather than systems optimization for cost, efficiency, and standardization limited consideration of behavior under stress conditions A structural gap exists between these two perspectives. Even precise specifications and detailed analytics are often insufficient to bridge it. The issue is not a lack of data, but a difference in how reality itself is perceived and prioritized. On one side: combat experience and direct understanding of operational constraints. On the other: engineering discipline, production logic, and commercial processes. These perspectives define different priorities and, ultimately, different interpretations of what “success” means. This misalignment is not just a business risk. In a military context, it directly affects outcomes on the battlefield—and therefore human lives. This is why alignment between field logic and industrial execution is critical. Working with Christophe DAUNIQUE has been a key factor in addressing this gap. His understanding of industrialized warfare, data-driven analysis, and solution design operates precisely at the intersection of these domains. What he brings is not just technical competence, but the ability to translate between systems: aligning business processes with battlefield requirements, and engineering solutions with operational reality. The approach he proposed demonstrates that even complex structural problems in the defense domain are solvable—if addressed correctly. I continue to work with him and I recommend that the circle around me take note of his caliber.
