Unconventional conflicts in a new security era : lessons from Malaya and Vietnam

Bibliographic Information

Unconventional conflicts in a new security era : lessons from Malaya and Vietnam

Sam C. Sarkesian

(Contributions in military studies, no. 134)

Greenwood Press, 1993

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [201]-215) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The United States must devise entirely new military and political strategies because threats to the nation's security have shifted so markedly. This work provides the first comparative analysis of unconventional conflicts, using Malaya and Vietnam as lessons for developing effective policies and operations to counter strife, drug wars, and new types of Third World conflict today. This text for students, experts, and policymakers in military studies, history, and international relations combines insights from primary and secondary sources, participant-observer experiences, and scholarly and professional thinking in order to formulate practical recommendations for future policy. Sarkesian provides a comparative framework for analyzing unconventional conflicts, describing past strategies used by Great Britain, France, and the United States. He defines the military posture and nature of conflict, leadership, and indigenous situations in Malaya and Vietnam. He analyzes the nature of revolutionary and counter-revolutionary systems. Sarkesian describes a new U.S. national security agenda to deal with a transformed geostrategic world landscape. A lengthy bibliography adds to the usefulness of this provocative text for classes in contemporary military studies, world history, war and peace, U.S. foreign policy, and conflict management.

Table of Contents

Preface Introduction Conflict Analysis: The Comparative Framework Comparative Analysis The State of the Nation: Great Britain, the United States, and Unconventional Conflicts Military Posture and Nature of Conflict: Malaya Military Posture and Nature of Conflict: The Diem Period in Vietnam Military Posture and Nature of Conflict: The United States and the Second Indo-China War Nature of Indigenous Systems: Revolutionary Systems Nature of Indigenous Systems: The Counterrevolutionary Systems Conclusions: Malaya and Vietnam Conclusions: What Needs to Be Done The United States and the Emerging Security Agenda Selected Bibliography Index

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