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FIELD MANUAL 3-24 (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   144340


Conducting counterinsurgency with productive power / Roennfeldt, Carsten F   Article
Roennfeldt, Carsten F Article
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Summary/Abstract Western governments tend to see power as synonymous with coercive force when they use their military forces in irregular armed conflicts abroad. Yet experiences from recent conflicts like Afghanistan and Iraq suggest that this understanding of power is unable to deliver the desired political ends. In an effort to better analyse and engage the political dynamics that dominate such conflicts, this article points to productive power. This theoretical perspective focuses on the micro-political dynamics that create legitimacy and mobilise people, which seminal counterinsurgency doctrines hold to be the goal.
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2
ID:   131474


Keep the change: counterinsurgency, Iraq, and historical understanding / Gventer, Celeste Ward   Journal Article
Gventer, Celeste Ward Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract This article explores the historical reasoning behind counterinsurgency thinking, particularly as applied to Iraq, using Douglas Porch's book, Counterinsurgency: Exposing the Myths of the New Way of War as a reference point. It argues that the classic historical analogies of counterinsurgency theory were inapt in dealing with the conflict in Iraq, and that the historical reasoning behind counterinsurgency more generally deserves greater scrutiny. Not only are the analogies of questionable applicability, but the evidence of causation in prior conflicts is ultimately unproveable. In the end, Counterinsurgency theory and the US Army's Field Manual 3-24 on Counterinsurgency were politically useful during the 'Surge', beginning in 2007, but remain intellectually and historically problematic.
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