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The Air Force Role in Low-Intensity Conflict (Paperback)
Loot Price: R452
Discovery Miles 4 520
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The Air Force Role in Low-Intensity Conflict (Paperback)
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Loot Price R452
Discovery Miles 4 520
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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This book grew from an opportunity to study a third world air force
fighting an externally supported insurgency. The players were the
Royal Moroccan Air Force and the Polisario, the latter trying to
wrest control of the Western Sahara from the Kingdom of Morocco.
The United States has also been a player in the Morocco-Polisario
war as the source of much of Morocco's war material, especially the
weapons used by the Royal Moroccan Air Force. Help from the United
States was especially important when the Polisario deployed
Soviet-built SA-6 surface-to-air missiles to counter the growing
effectiveness of the Royal Moroccan Air Force. For many reasons,
the United States and the US Air Force were not able to assist the
Moroccans effectively. The Morocco-Polisario-US scenario that
provides the basis for this study was a tiny aspect of the US
foreign and military policy in the early 1980s. But it shows a
political-military problem that deserves a good deal of thought
now. That problem simply stated is: How is the United States going
to exert political-military influence in the third world during the
next twenty years? Clearly, overall US influence in the third world
will be a combination of political, military, economic, and social
activity. But the military, in many cases, will be the most visible
form of assistance, and one upon which the recipient nation will
depend for immediate results. Are the military components as
instruments of national policy able to act effectively in the third
world? If not, what needs to be done? The US Air Force (and the
other services) needs to consider the question of effective
assistance to third world countries as part of a basic shift in
strategic thinking. Our primary strategic planning effort has been
to insert large numbers of US ground and air forces into an area
such as the Persian Gulf to accomplish our policy objectives. That
planning effort must continue, but with the understanding that
inserting a major US force in any third world region is extremely
unlikely, both for domestic political reasons and because potential
host nations are reluctant to support large US forces. Our primary
strategic focus for planning needs to shift to providing effective
leverage for third world friends and allies. That leverage can be
in the form of arms sales, training, doctrine, or even small
specialized forces. But providing leverage depends on effective
planning that builds the data base which allows us to pinpoint the
host country's needs and capabilities. Developing that kind of
expertise in the USAF, and in the other services, will be a
difficult and frustrating long-term proposition. The Air Force must
recognize the need for a change and must act upon it. Planning to
exert effective political-military influence in the third world may
not be a glamorous task, but it will be the name of the game for
the next twenty years and beyond. This book offers some ideas in
that regard.
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