Resolving Insurgencies - USAWC SSI Monograph
Excellent monograph from the Army War College's Strategic Studies Institute which examines how past insurgencies have ended and how current ones may be resolved - identifies four ways in which insurgencies have ended:
- Clear-cut victories for the government (Malaya, Greece, Sri Lanka) or for the insurgents (Palestine, Algeria, Kosovo) - more common during the era of decolonization but seldom happen today.
- Degeneration into criminal organizations that become committed to making money rather than fighting a revolution or evolve into terrorist groups capable of nothing more than sporadic violence (ETA, Shining Path, FARC).
- Co-opting the insurgents (Northern Ireland, El Sal, Sierra Leone) - achieving a strategic stalemate and persuading the belligerents that they have nothing to gain from continued fighting, then drawing the insurgents into the legitimate political process through reform and concessions - a strategy the author argues offers the best hope of U.S. success in Afghanistan and in future counterinsurgency campaigns.
Resolving Insurgencies
Thomas R. Mockaitis - Professor of History at DePaul University who team-teaches terrorism and counterterrorism courses internationally with other experts through the Center for Civil-Military Relations at the Naval Post-Graduate School.
http://www.strategicstudiesinstitute...cfm?PubID=1072
Richard
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“Sometimes the Bible in the hand of one man is worse than a whisky bottle in the hand of (another)… There are just some kind of men who – who’re so busy worrying about the next world they’ve never learned to live in this one, and you can look down the street and see the results.” - To Kill A Mockingbird (Atticus Finch)
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