assignment
PS114. International Security in a Changing World
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Introduction to Asymmetric Warfare
1 Regular vs Irregular Wars
Comparison of Interstate War with Insurgent Wars
Regular Wars Irregular Wars
AKA: interstate war, conventional war insurgency, asymmetric conflict, civil war, guerrilla warfare, intrastate war, extrastate war, revolution*
Participants: State Actor vs State Actor State Actor vs Non-State Actor Motivation for War: Territory, policy change, regime
change, status quo Ideology, religious extremism, ethnic separatism, colonialism, culture, regime change, possibly territory
Goal: Military, economic, or political change Political change War of ... Blitzkrieg Attrition Relative Power be- tween Participants:
Symmetric Asymmetric
Overall Strategy: Direct: orchestrate military o↵ensives to eliminate the enemy
Indirect: undermine the incumbent or insurgency’s will to fight
Tactics: Military battles, coercion, fire power, troops, tactics to eliminate the enemy, convince civilians to resist
guerrilla tactics, terror, propaganda, convince civilians to collaborate with insurgency, use local knowledge, fight on own turf
Casualties: High Low to Moderate How is War Changing in the 21st Century?
Drones, WMDs, field medicine, mecha- nization
Internet, cell phones, “twi-plomacy,” new techniques to finance insurgency (oil, minerals)
Outcome: Stronger power wins Stronger power or weaker power wins conditional on other factors
Examples: World War I, World War II, Gulf War, War in Iraq (early)
Vietnam War, War in Iraq (late), Tu- areg Rebellion in Mali, ISIL
Reference Definitions:
• State: Members of the international system who are able to exert the independence, possess territory, and have a central government (COW)
• Non-State Actor: An organization, group, or collection who live within the borders of another state, but are not integrated into the metropole, e.g. insurgency, guerrillas, terrorists (COW)
• Insurgency: An organization fighting for political change whose movement is marked by the support and mobilization of a significant proportion of the population both domestically and external (Kiras)
1 2015. Iris Malone. Please do not cite or share without author’s permission
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