Contact us on (02) 8445 2300
For all customer service and order enquiries

Woodslane Online Catalogues

Irregular Soldiers and Rebellious States

Small-Scale U.S. Interventions Abroad
Description
Author
Biography
Table of
Contents
Google
Preview
With the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq seemingly drawing down, and with new calls to focus on the threats of great power competition posed by states such as China and Russia on the rise, what will happen to U.S. capabilities for dealing with conflicts that occur in messy political-military environments? Irregular Soldiers and Rebellious States offers, for both expert and non-expert audiences, a useful typology and background for examining interventions where U.S. advisors and forces operating on a small-scale basis will either work with a foreign government to help defend it from threats of subversion or insurgency (known as Foreign Internal Defense) or to assist insurgents or guerrilla forces in countering a hostile regime (known as Unconventional Warfare). It uses nine examples to illustrate how the U.S.-and the British in one case-used such capabilities in either limited or assertive ways to defend (El Salvador, Philippines, Sahel, and Dhofar) or counter (Angola, Nicaragua, northern Iraq, and Afghanistan) foreign governments. Placing such interventions within the broader contexts of American military history and the cultures of the armed forces, it offers three key findings and six policy prescriptions for wisely and judiciously using these capabilities in the present and future.
Michael P. Noonan is the director of Research and the Director of the Program on National Security at the Foreign Policy Research Institute. A former Captain in the U.S. Army Reserve, he has taught at Loyola University Chicago and Haverford College. His writings have appeared in The American Interest, Orbis, Parameters, National Security Studies Quarterly, and FPRI E-Notes. He is the editor of, and contributor to, Geopoliticus: The FPRI Blog and also blogs at the U.S. News and World Report's World Report.
Chapter 1: Introduction Chapter 2: The Offensive-Limited Indirect Approach Chapter 3: The Offensive-Assertive Indirect Approach Chapter 4: The Defensive-Limited Indirect Approach Chapter 5: The Defensive-Assertive Indirect Approach Chapter 6: Lessons and the Path Forward
Google Preview content