Beating Goliath: Why Insurgencies WinPotomac Books, Inc., 2011 - Всего страниц: 193 Beating Goliath examines the phenomenon of victories by the weak over the strong--more specifically, insurgencies that succeeded against great powers. Jeffrey Record reviews eleven insurgent wars from 1775 to the present and determines why the seemingly weaker side won. He concludes that external assistance correlates more consistently with insurgent success than any other explanation. He does not disparage the critical importance of will, strategy, and strong-side regime type or suggest that external assistance guarantees success. Indeed, in all cases, some combination of these factors is usually present. But Record finds few if any cases of unassisted insurgent victories except against the most decrepit regimes. Having identified the ingredients of insurgent success, Record examines the present insurgency in Iraq and whether the United States can win. In so doing, Record employs a comparative analysis of the Vietnam War and the Iraq War. He also identifies and assesses the influence of distinctive features of the American way of war on the U.S. forces' performance against the Iraqi insurgency. Make no mistake: insurgent victories are the exception, not the rule. But when David does beat Goliath, the consequences can be earth shattering and change the course of history. Jeffrey Record's persuasive logic and clear writing make this timely book a must read for scholars, policymakers, military strategists, and anyone interested in the Iraq War's outcome. |
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... militarily effective it is risky. Barbarism carries the possibility of domestic political discovery (and opposition) as well as external intervention. 35 Arreguin-Toft contends that the stronger side is most likely to lose when it ...
... militarily effective it is risky. Barbarism carries the possibility of domestic political discovery (and opposition) as well as external intervention. 35 Arreguin-Toft contends that the stronger side is most likely to lose when it ...
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... militarily potent if politically self-defeating in Algeria, but is the counterinsurgent choice, as implied by Merom and Arreguin-Toft, restricted simply to going barbaric or going down to defeat? Such a strategy was not employed by the ...
... militarily potent if politically self-defeating in Algeria, but is the counterinsurgent choice, as implied by Merom and Arreguin-Toft, restricted simply to going barbaric or going down to defeat? Such a strategy was not employed by the ...
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... militarily revolutionary war conducted by Americans who refused to fight the way the British wanted them to because they understood that to do so was to invite catastrophic defeat . 14 Further , the British government and army were not ...
... militarily revolutionary war conducted by Americans who refused to fight the way the British wanted them to because they understood that to do so was to invite catastrophic defeat . 14 Further , the British government and army were not ...
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... militarily more powerful, state than the Thirteen Colonies, but the combination of distance and the intervention of France condemned it to be the weaker side in North America. Thus, within the theater of operations, the colonies were ...
... militarily more powerful, state than the Thirteen Colonies, but the combination of distance and the intervention of France condemned it to be the weaker side in North America. Thus, within the theater of operations, the colonies were ...
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