Amateur soldiers, global wars : insurgency and modern conflict

Author(s)

    • Fowler, Michael C.

Bibliographic Information

Amateur soldiers, global wars : insurgency and modern conflict

Michael C. Fowler

Praeger Security International, 2005

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [161]-178) and index

HTTP:URL=http://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/ecip0514/2005017475.html Information=Table of contents

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Transnational politics, modern communications, and access to the tools of warfare have combined to give political movements the ability to wage global war to promote their own agendas, a development that has changed the face of both politics and warfare. Fowler examines current aspects of conducting war, including mobilization, funding, training, fighting, and intelligence to demonstrate how they are accessible to anyone and are well-suited to waging insurgency efforts in many places around the world. Such efforts force governments to deal with unforeseen enemies who violently advance their agendas in a quest for increased power and authority. Because global insurgents, such as al Qaeda, build more direct connections between politics and the use of force, confronting them requires solutions that emphasize politics as much as the use of force. National governments must unite to seek cooperative solutions to issues that affect them. The implications of the adoption of such strategies by groups with varied agendas will undoubtedly change foreign policy planning for decades to come.

Table of Contents

Introduction Leadership and Mobilization Warfare Intelligence Support A Theory of Global Insurgency Al Qaeda, The Nazis, and the Boxer Rebellion End Notes Works Cited Works Consulted Index

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