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Population-Centric Counterinsurgency - A False Idol. Three Monographs from the School of Advanced Military Studies (Paperback):... Population-Centric Counterinsurgency - A False Idol. Three Monographs from the School of Advanced Military Studies (Paperback)
Thomas Bruscino, Dan G. Cox; Combat Studies Institute Press
R485 Discovery Miles 4 850 Ships in 18 - 22 working days
Population-Centric Counterinsurgency - A False Idol?: Three Monographs from the School of Advanced Military Studies... Population-Centric Counterinsurgency - A False Idol?: Three Monographs from the School of Advanced Military Studies (Paperback)
Thomas Bruscino, Dan G. Cox
R505 Discovery Miles 5 050 Ships in 18 - 22 working days

Rarely is it a good idea for any field of human endeavor to be dominated by a single theory aimed at addressing a pressing problem. However, such dominance has recently occurred in the American approach to counterinsurgency warfare. In recent years, driven by the perceived failures in the American war in Iraq, the United States military, and in particular the United States Army, has determined that when it comes to counterinsurgency, the population-centric approach is the only way to go. The population-centric approach dominates the Army's capstone manual on Counterinsurgency, Field Manual 3-24, a document published in late 2006 in order to help redress shortcomings in fighting the war in Iraq.1 The driving force behind the manual, General David Petraeus, took the principles contained therein with him to Iraq, applied them during the famous surge of 2007-2008, and ultimately turned that war around. According to this popular account, the population-centric approach had been vindicated, and it became something of received truth about how to prosecute counterinsurgency.

A Nation Forged in War - How World War II Taught Americans to Get Along (Paperback): Thomas Bruscino A Nation Forged in War - How World War II Taught Americans to Get Along (Paperback)
Thomas Bruscino
R841 Discovery Miles 8 410 Ships in 18 - 22 working days

World War II shaped the United States in profound ways, and this new book--the first in the Legacies of War series--explores one of the most significant changes it fostered: a dramatic increase in ethnic and religious tolerance. "A Nation Forged in War" is the first full-length study of how large-scale mobilization during the Second World War helped to dissolve long-standing differences among white soldiers of widely divergent backgrounds.
Never before or since have so many Americans served in the armed forces at one time: more than 15 million donned uniforms in the period from 1941 to 1945. Thomas Bruscino explores how these soldiers' shared experiences--enduring basic training, living far from home, engaging in combat--transformed their views of other ethnic groups and religious traditions. He further examines how specific military policies and practices worked to counteract old prejudices, and he makes a persuasive case that throwing together men of different regions, ethnicities, religions, and classes not only fostered a greater sense of tolerance but also forged a new American identity. When soldiers returned home after the war with these new attitudes, they helped reorder what it meant to be white in America.
Using the presidential campaigns of Al Smith in 1928 and John F. Kennedy in 1960 as bookend events, Bruscino notes a key change in religious bias. Smith's defeat came at the end of a campaign rife with anti-Catholic sentiment; Kennedy's victory some three decades later proved that such religious bigotry was no longer an insurmountable obstacle. Despite such advances, Bruscino notes that the growing broad-mindedness produced by the war had limits: it did not extend to African Americans, whose own struggle for equality would dramatically mark the postwar decades.
Extensively documented, "A Nation Forged in War" is one of the few books on the social and cultural impact of the World War II years. Scholars and students of military, ethnic, social, and religious history will be fascinated by this groundbreaking new volume.

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