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SPECIAL WARFARE (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   131468


Naw Bahar District 2010-11: a case study of counterinsurgency conducted by naval special warfare in Afghanistan / Briggs, Thomas   Journal Article
Briggs, Thomas Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract This article provides a critical analysis of counterinsurgency in Afghanistan at the tactical level. The efforts of several Naval Special Warfare detachments deployed to Naw Bahar district in Zabul Province, Afghanistan are examined in detail to identify key successes and failures in planning and execution. It defines the operating environment in which the detachments worked and identifies the goals and outcomes of the first and second phases of the counterinsurgency effort. The article concludes by placing the tactical effort in the context of the overall strategy in Afghanistan and suggests that time is the limiting factor to success.
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2
ID:   135218


Zero dark squared: does the US benefit from more Special Operations Forces? / Martin, Grant   Article
Martin, Grant Article
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Summary/Abstract There is no question that the number of United States Special Operations Forces (SOF) is growing. This paper argues that focusing on the increase in size obscures what should be the real debate: what kind of SOF should the US employ in the twenty-first century? I conclude with two ideas: that SOF’s best capability is at the tactical level, and that the largest benefit they can provide a democracy is in the conduct of special warfare, and not the more popular surgical strike operations. It would be wise, therefore, for democracies to resist the natural inclination to grow SOF simply because they perceive a growth in asymmetric threats. SOF, conducting special warfare, can offer democracies both a “special” capability and also more subtle, longer-term influence than is normally associated with conventional armed forces.
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