Responding to Low-Intensity Conflict Challenges

Responding to Low-Intensity Conflict Challenges
Title Responding to Low-Intensity Conflict Challenges PDF eBook
Author Stephen Blank
Publisher DIANE Publishing
Total Pages 336
Release 1993-05
Genre
ISBN 9781568064369

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Responding to Low-intensity Conflict Challenges

Responding to Low-intensity Conflict Challenges
Title Responding to Low-intensity Conflict Challenges PDF eBook
Author Stephen Blank
Publisher
Total Pages 336
Release 1990
Genre Developing countries
ISBN

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Responding to Low-intensity Conflict Challenges

Responding to Low-intensity Conflict Challenges
Title Responding to Low-intensity Conflict Challenges PDF eBook
Author Stephen Blank
Publisher
Total Pages 318
Release 1990
Genre Developing countries
ISBN

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Low-intensity Conflict in the Third World

Low-intensity Conflict in the Third World
Title Low-intensity Conflict in the Third World PDF eBook
Author Stephen Blank
Publisher
Total Pages 196
Release 1988
Genre Political Science
ISBN

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A common thread ties together the five case studies of this book: the persistence with which the bilateral relationship between the United States and the Soviet Union continues to dominate American foreign and regional policies. These essays analyze the LIC environment in Central Asia, the Middle East, Southeast Asia, Latin America, and sub-Saharan Africa.

The Army and Low Intensity Conflict

The Army and Low Intensity Conflict
Title The Army and Low Intensity Conflict PDF eBook
Author Rick Waddell
Publisher Fortis Publishing
Total Pages 322
Release 2013-02
Genre History
ISBN 9781937592325

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During the Cold War, given the threat of the Soviet military poised in Eastern Europe, the Army had to be able to wage armored warfare. The fear of low intensity conflict throughout the Cold War was the fear of bleeding to death from small bites. In this vein low intensity conflict was equivalent to an economy-of-force operation where our adversaries struck at us in our most vulnerable areas - terrorism, subversion, and insurgency. But, the challenge of low intensity conflict transcended the Cold War. The Soviets are gone, but the style of conflict remains: the security environment of the future may look more like the urban hell of Beirut, Sarajevo, or Baghdad where hand-held missiles and crude homemade bombs threaten air and ground movement, and more like the jungles of Vietnam or the mountains of Afghanistan, where the physical and human terrain negates or reduces the effectiveness of heavy weapons and high technology devices. Despite a large number of works that dealt with some aspect of low intensity conflict, none focused exclusively on the evolution of the Army's response to this security challenge. Understanding this evolution is important because the problems of terrorism, insurgency, peacekeeping, and contingency operations - the categories of low intensity conflict - took on new relevance in a world without the Soviet Union. The great bipolar confrontation had, for 45 years, submerged many of the world's ethnic, religious, and economic passions. The end of the Cold War gave these passions a new, violent and bloody freedom. Although interstate conflict remains a threat, many of the aforementioned passions give rise to internal conflicts which require the use of force in non-traditional ways. The Army did not respond well to the challenge in the past, costing thousands of American lives and setting up the only strategic defeat that the United States has suffered. By the early 1990s, the United States government once again determined that it wanted the capability to respond to these challenges. The changes in the early 1990s to the national strategy and the subordinate military strategy placed far greater emphasis on low intensity missions for the Army than had been the case since the early 1960s. Much of the post-Cold War Army would be based in the continental United States, and organized for rapid deployability in response to regional crises. Thus, the greater focus on conflict at the lower end of the spectrum colored the Army's, as well as the nation's, foreign policy abilities in the rest of the decade. Understanding the process of organizational change in the military, then, is necessary to the appropriate management of the Army's mission. If the Army does not prepare well to enact changed national strategy, the costs are quite high in human terms. And, as the defeat in Vietnam demonstrated, the political costs to the nation are quite high, too. We have now engaged in more than a decade of war after the 9-11 attacks, mostly of the low intensity variety. This book sets the stage for understanding the process the Army went through before it entered that decade, and can help us understand how the Army changed during the war.

Low Intensity Operations

Low Intensity Operations
Title Low Intensity Operations PDF eBook
Author Frank Kitson
Publisher
Total Pages 208
Release 1971
Genre Armies
ISBN 9780571271023

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Low Intensity Operations is an important, controversial and prophetic book that has had a major influence on the conduct of modern warfare. First published in 1971, it was the result of an academic year Frank Kitson spent at University College, Oxford, under the auspices of the Ministry of Defence, to write a paper on the way in which the army should be prepared to deal with future insurgency and peacekeeping operations. Its findings and propositions are as striking as when the work was first published. 'To understand the nature of revolutionary warfare, one cannot do better than read Low Intensity Operations... The author has had unrivalled experience of such operations in many parts of the world.' Daily Telegraph 'A highly practical analysis of subversion, insurgency and peacekeeping operations... Frank Kitson's book is not merely timely but important.' The Economist

Low-Intensity Conflict in the Third World

Low-Intensity Conflict in the Third World
Title Low-Intensity Conflict in the Third World PDF eBook
Author Lewis B. Ware
Publisher
Total Pages 178
Release 1988-08
Genre Air power
ISBN 9781585660223

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