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LYAUTEY (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   096697


Imperial nostalgia, the liberal lie, and the perils of postmode / Marshall, Alex   Journal Article
Marshall, Alex Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Summary/Abstract Since 9/11, counterinsurgency is back in fashion; the 'war on terror' has even been branded a 'global counterinsurgency'. However the context within which counterinsurgency originally arose is critical to understanding the prospects for its present success; the radically changed environment in which it is currently being conducted casts into considerable doubt the validity of the doctrine's application by many national militaries currently 'rediscovering' this school of military thought today. Above all, classical counterinsurgency was a profoundly imperial, state-centric phenomenon; consequently it only rarely faced the thorny issue of sovereignty and legitimacy which bedevils and may doom these same efforts today.
Key Words Counterinsurgency  Iraq  Afghanistan  Algeria  Morocco  North Caucasus 
Democratic Peace Theory  State Stability  Galula  Lyautey 
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ID:   099706


Nineteenth century origins of counterinsurgency doctrine / Rid, Thomas   Journal Article
Rid, Thomas Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Summary/Abstract In counterinsurgency, the population is the center of gravity. This insight has become a key doctrinal tenet of modern armed conflict. But where does it come from? The razzia, a tactic introduced by the French in North Africa around 1840, first thrust tribal populations into the focus of modern operational thinking. Soon the pioneering bureaux arabes added an administrative, civil, and political element. Eventually, in the 1890s, French operations in Madagascar gave rise to a mature counterinsurgency doctrine. David Galula, a French writer who heavily influenced the American Counterinsurgency manual, is merely the joint that connects the nineteenth century to the twenty-first.
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