Arms and influence
The political uses of violence, for good or bad.
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Archives
January 18, 2009 - January 24, 2009
November 9, 2008 - November 15, 2008
November 2, 2008 - November 8, 2008
October 26, 2008 - November 1, 2008
October 12, 2008 - October 18, 2008
October 5, 2008 - October 11, 2008
September 21, 2008 - September 27, 2008
September 14, 2008 - September 20, 2008
July 13, 2008 - July 19, 2008
July 6, 2008 - July 12, 2008
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Categories
Afghanistan
Alliance politics
Asia
Books
Charter
China
Counterinsurgency
Counterproliferation
Counterterrorism
Current Affairs
Current events
Declarations of war
Democracy and constitutionalism
Dynamics of strategy
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Guerrilla warfare/insurgency
History
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Iran
Iraq
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Israel
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Lebanon
Leverage and power
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Proliferation
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Revolutionary warfare
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Science and politics
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Spectrum of strategy
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Unconventional weapons
US foreign policy
Vietnam
War aims
Wargames
Weblogs
WWII
Core topic
1. GETTING STARTED
2. WAR AIMS
2a. Why war?
2b. Meet Thomas Schelling
2c. The fog of war aims
2d. The war against what?
2e. How great a victory?
3. DECLARATIONS OF WAR
3a. The dog that didn't bark
3b. War and the US Constitution
3c. The dam and the river
4. LEVERAGE AND POWER
4a. Power is only potential
4b. Power and context
4c. Power and anti-politics
4d. Alliances are more than constraints
4e. Showing your hand
5. THE SPECTRUM OF STRATEGY
5a. "A war like no other"
5b. The levels of strategy
5c. The grand strategic level
5d. The theater level
5e. The operational level
5f. Operational strategy, another example
5g. The tactical level
5h. The technical level
6. DYNAMICS OF STRATEGY
6a. Friction
6b. The initiative
6c. Measure and counter-measure
6d. The indirect approach
6e. Simplicity and redunancy
6f. The center of gravity
7. REVOLUTION, TERROR, AND INSURGENCY
7a. Revolution and violence
7b. Revolutionaries and war aims
7c. Causes of revolutionary violence
7d. Elections and insurgencies
7e. The evolution of revolution
7f. Revolution's minimum entry requirements
7g. Revolutionary chaos, radical order
8. REVOLUTIONARY STRATEGIES
8a. The Maoist strategy
8b. The Leninist strategy
8c. The terrorist strategy
8d. Revolutionary organizations
8e. Dynamics of revolutionary strategy
9. COUNTER-REVOLUTIONARY STRATEGIES
9a. Counterinsurgency is hard, part I
9b. Counterinsurgency is hard, part II
9c. Counterinsurgency is hard, part III
9d. Counterinsurgency is hard, part IV
9e. Counterinsurgency is hard, part V
9f. Counterinsurgency is doable, part I
9g. Counterinsurgency is doable, part II
9h. Counterinsurgency is doable, part III
9i. Counterinsurgency is doable, part IV
9j. Counterinsurgency is doable, part V
9k. Counterterrorism is easier, part I
9l. Counterterrorism is easier, part II
9m. Counterterrorism is easier, part III
Exploding myths
A terrorist nuclear attack is inevitable.
Alliances constrain too much.
Any good army can defeat guerrillas.
By showing strength, we automatically deter our enemies.
Captured terrorists have information that could help stop an imminent attack.
Citizen soldiers form our military.
Complete secrecy is required when fighting terrorists.
Doing something and having the right values are the measures of leadership.
Elections can stop insurgencies.
Federal authorities are doing a great job identifying, monitoring, and nabbing terrorists in the US.
Iraq can't possibly be like Vietnam.
Middle Eastern countries are medieval.
More information is better information.
Our troops are the finest in the world, so they are fated to win.
Releasing more photos and video will make a bad situation worse.
The Constitution doesn't fit the new reality of war against terrorists.
The Iraq invasion has crippled terrorist groups.
The war against terrorists is like nothing else we've ever faced.
Torture helps get convictions.
Torture works.
We are fighting a single insurgency in Iraq that's part of the global terrorist network.
We have to be hyper-vigilant to stop terrorists.
We know what victory in this war means.
We're fighting a war on terror.
We're winning the war of ideas.
What al Qaeda wants is a mystery.
Archives
Categories
Afghanistan
Alliance politics
Asia
Books
Charter
China
Counterinsurgency
Counterproliferation
Counterterrorism
Current Affairs
Current events
Declarations of war
Democracy and constitutionalism
Dynamics of strategy
Europe
Guerrilla warfare/insurgency
History
Intelligence
Iran
Iraq
Islam
Israel
Japan
Journalism
Latin America
Lebanon
Leverage and power
Middle East
Military affairs
Military theory
Movies
North Korea
Off-topic
Pakistan
Podcast
Practice
Proliferation
Religion and revolution
Revolutionary warfare
Russia
Science and politics
Special operations
Spectrum of strategy
Terrorism
Turkey
Unconventional weapons
US foreign policy
Vietnam
War aims
Wargames
Weblogs
WWII
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Need to read
Allison, Essence of Decision
Ambrose, D-Day
Baer, See No Evil
Blaufarb, The Counterinsurgency Era
Boot, Savage Wars of Peace
Brogan, The Fighting Never Stopped
Calwell, Small Wars: Their Principles and Practice
Clausewitz, On War
Coll, Ghost Wars
Cottam, Competitive Interference and Twentieth Century Diplomacy
Gaddis, Strategies of Containment
George, The Limits of Coercive Diplomacy
Herr, America's Longest War: The United States and Vietnam, 1950-1975
Herrington, Silence Was a Weapon
Hersh, Chain of Command
Hoffman, Inside Terrorism
Ikle, Every War Must End
Janis, Victims of Groupthink
Juergensmeyer, Terror in the Mind of God
Kagan, The Peloponnesian Wars
Karnow, Vietnam
Keegan, The Face of Battle
Keegan, The Mask of Command
Krepinevich, The Army and Vietnam
Laquer, Voices of Terror
Liddell-Hart, Strategy
Luttwak, Strategy: The Logic of War and Peace
Paret, The Makers of Modern Strategy
Pipes, In the Path of God
Priest, The Mission
Rashid, Taliban: Militant Islam, Oil and Fundamentalism in Central Asia
Sageman, Understanding Terror Networks
Schelling, Arms and Influence
Schelling, The Strategy of Conflict
Shulsky and Schmitt, Silent Warfare: Understanding the World of Intelligence
Thucydides, The Peloponnesian Wars