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Unconventional Warfare: Framework and Analysis
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 July 2011
Extract
The importance and political implications of the subject of unconventional warfare are well known and need not be elaborated upon here. At the present time, the three branches of the American military services are expanding their “special” forces, preparing for the eventuality of conflicts of smaller scope than conventional warfare. On the Soviet side, the theory of peaceful coexistence—i.e., the thesis that capitalism should be eliminated by popular movements rather than by foreign armies—was reasserted at the January conference of the S.E.D. in Berlin, by no lesser authority than Nikita Khrushchev himself.
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References
1 Cf. Garthoff, Raymond L., “Unconventional Warfare in Communist Strategy,” Foreign Affairs, XL (July 1962), 567.Google Scholar
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4 Salvko N. Bjelajac, “Unconventional Warfare: American and Soviet Approaches,” ibid., 74.
5 Russell Rhyne, “Unconventional Warfare—Problems and Questions,” ibid., 102.
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19 The “sufficiency” of space, of course, depends on the degree of absolute mobility, as determined by prevailing military technology. In the days of motorized troops and tanks, the space provided by Silesia or Hungary would not be sufficient for this type of mobile warfare.
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23 Two perceptive analyses of the relation of political and military factors in unconventional warfare are Johnson, Chalmers A., “Civilian Loyalties and Guerrilla Conflict,” World Politics, XIV (July 1962), 646–61CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Lindsay, Franklin A., “Unconventional Warfare,” Foreign Affairs, XL (January 1962), 264–74.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
24 Cf. Huntington, xix.
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