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In the last few years, notions like 'asymmetric warfare, ' and,
more recently, 'hybrid warfare' have become as common and pervasive
as to appear like new orthodoxy in military thought. This U.S. Army
War College International Fellow student author examines these
theories through the lens of critical thinking and argues that
these 'new' constructs are anything but original. Analyzing two
historical case studies, the First Jewish-Roman War (66-73 CE) and
the Philippine-American War (1899-1902 CE), he demonstrates that
asymmetry and hybridism have been common characteristics of war
through the ages since the very beginning of humanity.
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