The complexity of modern asymmetric warfare
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The complexity of modern asymmetric warfare
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A leading authority on national security offers new tools for combating global insurgencies. Today more than one hundred small, asymmetric, and revolutionary wars are being waged around the world. This book provides invaluable tools for fighting such wars by taking enemy perspectives into consideration. Using case studies, Manwaring outlines vital survival lessons for leaders and organizations concerned with national security in our contemporary world. The insurgencies Manwaring describes span the globe. Beginning with conflicts in Algeria in the 1950s and 1960s and El Salvador in the 1980s, he goes on to cover the Shining Path and its resurgence in Peru, Al Qaeda in Spain, popular militias in Cuba, Haiti, and Brazil, the Russian youth group Nashi, and drugs and politics in Guatemala, as well as cyber warfare. Large, wealthy, well-armed nations such as the United States have learned from experience that these small wars and insurgencies do not resemble traditional wars fought between geographically distinct nation-state adversaries by easily identified military forces. Twenty-first-century irregular conflicts blur traditional distinctions among crime, terrorism, subversion, insurgency, militia, mercenary and gang activity, and warfare. In addition, Manwaring explains, warfare is no longer conducted exclusively by professional soldiers. Hackers, financiers, media experts, and software engineers, among others, must be included in the strategic architecture for contemporary conflict. Whether we call them unrestricted wars, insurgencies, or revolutions, the wars of the future will be total in terms of both scope and time. Manwaring's multidimensional paradigm offers military and civilian leaders a much needed blueprint for achieving strategic victories and ensuring global security now and in the future. It combines military and police efforts with politics, diplomacy, economics, psychology, and ethics. The challenge he presents is to take probable enemy perspectives into consideration, and turn resultant conceptions into strategic victories.
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