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ID080768
Title ProperInnovation or Inertia
Other Title Informationthe U.S. military and the learning of counterinsurgency
LanguageENG
AuthorUcko, David
Publication2008.
Summary / Abstract (Note)Following its encounter with insurgent violence in Iraq, the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) has sought to improve the U.S. military's ability to conduct counterinsurgency. This effort suggests a potential turning-point in the history of the U.S. military, which has traditionally devoted its attention and resources to "high-intensity" or "conventional" combat. Given this institutional culture, what are now the prospects of the U.S. military 'learning counterinsurgency'? In many ways, the ongoing reorientation is promising and targeted, informed directly by the U.S. campaign in Iraq. At the same time, Pentagon priorities still reveal a remarkable resistance to change, and this in spite of the radically altered strategic environment of the War on Terror. Given this intransigence - and the eventual fall-out from the troubled Iraq campaign - the ongoing learning of counterinsurgency might very well fail to produce the type of deep-rooted change needed to truly transform the U.S. military
`In' analytical NoteOrbis Vol. 52, No.2; Spring 2008: p290-310
Journal SourceOrbis Vol. 52, No.2; Spring 2008: p290-310
Key WordsCounter Insurgency ;  Iraq War ;  United States - Military ;  Terrorism