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ID139110
Title ProperCOIN
Other Title Informationa study of strategic illusion
LanguageENG
AuthorEtzioni , Amitai
Summary / Abstract (Note)Has the US military become a learning institution, one able to transition from relying on a conventional war model to fighting against irregular adversaries such as insurgents and terrorists? This article examines the United States' interventions in Iraq and Afghanistan in an effort to respond to this question. It shows that there are two major ways for a military to fail to be a ‘learning’ institution: It may stick to its old dogma or – adopt a flawed new one. Those who saw counterinsurgency (COIN) doctrine as the best way to stabilize Iraq and Afghanistan made the US military into a learning organization – but taught it the wrong lesson. They failed to take into account the absence of the sociological conditions that make a post-conflict environment amenable to nation-building, which is an integral part of the main variants of counterinsurgency. The article closes by outlining the foremost reasons the US military continues to be a poorly adaptive organization.
`In' analytical NoteSmall Wars and Insurgencies Vol. 26, No.3; Jun 2015: p.345-376
Journal SourceSmall Wars and Insurgencies Vol: 26 No 3
Key WordsCounterterrorism ;  Iraq ;  Afghanistan ;  Marshall Plan ;  Malaya ;  Nation – Building


 
 
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