Ann, Adele -
Women Fighters of Liberation Tigers, LTTE International
Secretariat, London, 1993
This work provides a brief historical sketch
of the birth, growth and development of the Women�s Military
Unit of the LTTE. It documents, m some detail, the engagement of
the women fighters in various armed combats in the liberation
war.
*
M. Cherif Bassiouni
-
International
Terrorism: Multilateral Conventions (1937-2001)
*Blodgett,
Brian :
Sri Lanka�s military: The Search For A Mission, July 2004
"This book explores the change of Sri Lanka's
military's mission from protecting the country from external
threats to countering insurgencies. From 1947 to 2004, Sri
Lanka's military has searched for a mission. When its initial
worry of an invasion by India did not materialize, the military
turned its focus on internal insurrection. With an expected end
to the 20-year conflict between the Jaffna Tamils and the
Sinhalese government, the military's mission will return to
external defense. However, without significant external or
internal threats, the government will neglect the military and
it will again become incapable of defending against any threat.
This book exams all aspects of the three services (army, navy,
and air force). Each chapter covers a decade of history and
includes each service's mission, operations, doctrine and
tactics, command and organization, weapon procurement and
existing weapons, personnel, retention, recruitment, training,
and summaries of each decade."
*
Fredric Boyce -
SOE's Ultimate Deception: Operation Periwig
"We should redouble our efforts to find a
solution to the problem of reducing the German will to resist
and then bring every appropriate weapon to bear to achieve this
end." - General Dwight D.Eisenhower to Combined Chiefs of
Staff, 20 November 1944
From the backflap: "In the closing months of
the Second World War in Europe, General Dwight D.
Eisenhower exhorted the Western Allied forces to redouble their
efforts to break the German will to resist. In considering this
appeal, General Gubbins, whose Special Operations Executive
(SOE) had accomplished much in the liberation of occupied
territory, was faced with a fundamental difficulty in the case
of Germany. Although some opposition to Nazism existed, it was
neither organised nor pro-Allied. He could not see how he could
foment administrative breakdown within the Reich to assist the
Allied forces in overrunning Germany. Then someone had the idea
of creating an entirely fictional German resistance movement
and `selling' it to the Nazi security authorities. Thus
Operation Periwig - SOE's enterprising plan to destabilise the
Third Reich from within - was born. From January until
April 1945 the Allies rained propaganda leaflets on the
retreating German troops and displaced civilians fleeing the
oncoming Allied ground forces; they broadcast messages to the
(imaginary) `resistance'; they planted the most scandalous
lies about eminent Nazis; and at the end they even
dropped four agents on fictitious missions.
In this, the first book dedicated solely to Periwig, Fredric
Boyce sheds new light on the vested interests and infighting
between Britain's secret organisations in the final stages of
the Second World War..."
*Ernesto
Che Guevara, Marc Becker (Introduction) -
Guerrilla Warfare Paperback - December
1998 **
[also
at amazon.co.uk]
**Ernesto
Che Guevara, et al -
The African Dream, Harvill Press, Paperback, August, 2000
The
book contains the complete text of the campaign diaries kept by
Guevara in the Congo in 1965-1966. In January 1965 Ernesto
Guevara, one of the heroes of the Cuban Revolutionary War and a
minister in Fidel Castro's government, vanished. His sudden
disappearance was a subject for conjecture all over the world.
He eventually surfaced in the heart of Africa where, with 100
Cuban guerilla fighters to assist him, he put into action his
theories of how to help the oppressed peoples of Africa throw of
the yoke of colonial imperialism...
From the Conclusion: "...It is important for
us to discover what are the demands we can place on a militant,
so that he can overcome the violent traumas of a reality with
which he must do battle. I think that candidates should first
pass through a very rigorous process of selection, as well as
being subjected to prior warnings. As I have said before, no one
believed the admonition that the revolution would require three
to five years to achieve success; when the reality confirmed
this, they suffered an internal collapse, the collapse of a
dream. Revolutionary militants who go off to take part in a
similar experience must begin without dreams, abandoning
everything that used to constitute their lives and exertions.
The only ones who should do it are those with a revolutionary
strength of mind much greater than the average (even the average
in a revolutionary country), with practical experience gained in
struggle, with a high level of political development, and with
solid discipline. The incorporation process should be gradual
and built around a small but tempered group, so that the
selection of new combatants can proceed directly and anyone who
does not meet the requirements can be removed. In other words, a
cadre policy should be pursued. This will allow a steady
increase in numbers without weakening the nucleus..."
* Clausewitz, Karl Von
-
On War (Penguin Classics)
The classic treatise that details war as the
exercise of force for the attainment of a political object,
unrestrained by any law save that of expediency
* Regis Debray -
Revolution in the Revolution?, 1967 [see also excerpts from
Revolution in
the Revolution? in the Strenghth of an Idea]
From the Preface by Leo Huberman and Paul
M.Sweezy: ".... In April 1967, Debray went as a journalist..
(to) Bolivia. He was arrested by the Bolivian police.....
reports - credible in view of what is known of present day Latin
American realities - have circulated that Debray has been
tortured and starved in prison and that he has been subject to
lengthy interrogation by the United States Central Intelligence
Agency. Why such barbarous treatment for a mere journalist? We
believe that Jean Paul-Sartre, the illustrious French
philosopher, stated the simple truth when he told a mass meeting
in Paris on 30 May 1967 (according to a report in Le Monde):
'Regis Debray has been arrested by the Bolivian authorities, not
for having participated in guerrilla activities but for having
written a book - Revolution in the Revolution? - which 'removes
all the brakes from guerrilla activities.'"
"...The guerrilla force is independent of
the civilian population, in action as well as in military
organisation; consequently it need not assume the direct defence
of the peasant population. The protection of the population
depends on the progressive destruction of the enemy's military
potential. It is relative to the overall balance of forces: the
populace will be completely safe when the opposing forces are
completely defeated....... the political and the military are
not separate, but form one organic whole, consisting of the
people's army, whose nucleus is the guerrilla army... the
guerrilla force is the party in embryo...."
*
Dyer, Gwynne -
War: The New Edition, 2005
*Gallie, W. B. -
Philosophers of Peace and War : Kant, Clausewitz, Marx, Engels and
Tolstoy (The Wiles Lectures)
* Latimer, Jon -
Deception in War: The Art of the Bluff, the Value of Deceit, and the
Most Thrilling Episodes of Cunning in Military History, from the
Trojan Horse to the Gulf War
* Liddell, Hart B. H.-
Strategy : Second Revised Edition, 1991
"Fools say that they learn by experience I
prefer to profit by others experience..." Bismarck
*
Alfred Thayer Mahan
-
The Influence of Sea Power upon History, 1660-1783
From
the Review by Harold Y. Grooms at
Amazon.com "...Mahan's book has had a tremendous impact on
history. It unquestionably shaped the imperialistic policies of
pre-World War I and pre-World War II Germany and Japan
respectively. Students trying to ascertain why leaders of those
nations acted as they did should read this work. The
elements of sea power are the same today as in 1900 when this
book was first published. With a world economy as interdependent
as today's, Mahan's principles are as valid as they were in the
1600's and 1700's, perhaps even more so. German war philosopher,
Carl von Clausewitz's classic treatise, "On War," is considered
a must read for every Army officer. Mahan's work is to the
sea-battle as von Clausewitz's is to the land. Historians,
military strategists, and architects of America's foreign,
economic and national security policies should read this
important work to gain insights on the necessity of protecting
vital and vulnerable sea lines of communications worldwide. "
* Alfred Thayer Mahan -
The Interest of America in Sea Power, Present and Future* Leo Marks -
Between Silk and Cyanide: A Codemaker's War, 1941-1945
* Lieutenant Colonel John
Nagl - Learning to Eat Soup
with a Knife: Counterinsurgency Lessons from Malaya and Vietnam
*
William R. Polk - Violent
Politics: A History of Insurgency, Terrorism, and Guerrilla War,
from the American Revolution to Iraq
*
Lawrence Paterson
-
Hitler's Grey Wolves: U-Boats in the Indian Ocean, 2006
"...Next
to nothing has been written about the U-boat war in the Indian
Ocean. This is the story of a forgotten campaign. The battle
began in August 1943, when a German submarine arrived in the
Malaysian harbour of Georgetown. In total, nearly fourty U-boats
were assigned to penetrate the Indian Ocean, serving alongside
troops of the occupying Imperial Japanese forces. The Japanese
allowed U-boats to use Malaysia as an operational station. From
that base, they mixed with Japanese forces on a hitherto unseen
scale: a move which spread the U-boat war throughout the vast
Indian Ocean and into the Pacific. Success in this theatre of
war held a real chance to swing the tide of battle in North
Africa in favour of Rommel, but the Germans essentially did too
little too late. The joint action also gave U-boats the
opportunity to penetrate the Pacific Ocean for the first time,
attacking shipping off the Australian coast and hunting off New
Zealand. Plans were even afoot for an assault on American supply
lines. The cooperation' also brought into stark relief the
fundamental differences of German and Japanese war aims. After
the crews of Italian supply submarines joined the Germans and
Japanese, relations between the fighting men of the three main
Axis powers were often brutal and almost constantly turbulent.
Stories of U-boats laden with gold and treasure stem almost
exlusively from boats destined to and returning from
Japanese-controlled Malaysia, laden with material exchanged
between the two major partners of the Triple Axis Alliance."
*Ramamurti, P -
The Freedom Struggle and the Dravidian Movement - Orient
Longman, 1987
*
Alex P. Schmid
and A.J. Jongman
-
Political Terrorism: A New Guide to Actors, Authors, Concepts, Data
Bases, Theories, and Literature
*Sun-Tzu, et
al
The Complete Art of War (History and Warfare) translated by
Ralph D. Sawyer [see also
Sun Tzu
on the Art of War]
"The only single-volume edition of the classic essays
on strategy by the great Sun Tzu and his descendant, Sun Pin,
translated by the world's foremost authority on ancient Chinese
strategic thought. The Complete Art of War includes a unique
index to the essential principles of strategy and Sawyer's
thoughtful chapter-by-chapter commentaries."
* Albert Speer,
Inside the Third Reich 1970
"...We must never forget, that under modern
conditions of life, science and technology, all war has become
greatly brutalized and that no one who joins in it, even in
self-defense, can escape becoming also in a measure brutalized.
Modern war cannot be limited in its destructive method and the
inevitable debasement of all participants... we as well as
our enemies have contributed to the proof that the central moral
problem is war and not its methods..."
*
Robert Thompson,
First published in the mid-60s, this book is
still the one by which all other counterinsurgency books are
judged. Based on the author's successful experience in Malaya,
and his subsequent advisory work for the Americans in Vietnam,
his keys to victory and success have not changed with time:
"It is a persistently methodical approach and steady pressure
which will gradually wear the insurgent down. The government
must not allow itself to be diverted either by countermoves on
the part of the insurgent or by the critics on its own side who
will be seeking a simpler and quicker solution. There are no
shortcuts or gimmicks."
* David Tucker -
Skirmishes at the Edge of Empire: The United States and
International Terrorism*Clive
Walker -
The Prevention of Terrorism in British Law, 1992
"... terrorism is ... frequently undertaken as
a military strategy, usually when two conditions prevail: first,
there is no chance of attaining the group�s objectives by direct
military force, and second, the group sees no point in pursuing
constitutional means. In short,
terrorism is said to be the weapon of the weak
...Assuming these conditions apply, terrorism will be employed
as one strategy within a wider enterprise. For instance, in
Maoist theory, terrorism is an early stage in guerrilla warfare
and becomes increasingly irrelevant as rebel forces grow.
Alternatively, terrorism may be a constant military tactic but
is combined with guerrilla operations and political agitation...
Either way, the weakness of the rebels dictates their modus
operandi. Most obvious of all, they must avoid open conflict
with the government�s military forces, which are overwhelmingly
stronger.
Hence �...
the central task of the guerrilla fighter is to keep himself
from being destroyed�. Next, terrorists must have good
intelligence in order to undertake effective operations without
detection. Finally, since constitutional methods are rejected,
there must be some compensating public emphasis on the motives
for their attacks in order to distance themselves from criminal
banditry. This is often secured through links with overt
political factions. There are two contexts in which the weak
commonly resort to revolutionary terrorism. First, it may be
utilised within independent States to achieve political change.
The rebels envisage that terrorism will trigger a spiral of
governmental repression and consequent loss of popularity and
authority. Thus: [The terrorists�] object is to shake the faith
of the man in the street in the government and its local
representatives, especially the police, so that in the end a
desperate population will seek security, not from authorities,
but from the terrorist and his political allies. There are two
substantial impediments to this theoretical blueprint.
First, terrorism is unlikely to succeed in the
many countries where governments have no obligation to heed
public fears or desires. Second, even if terrorism does provoke
a reaction, that repression may secure the military defeat of
the perpetrators. As a result, outright success has rarely been
achieved by this path, the only exceptions perhaps being Cuba
and Rhodesia, where terrorism was only one facet of the
insurgency. However, it may be counted as a partial terrorist
success if governmental victory is achieved at the expense of
political fragmentation or deep unpopularity, since they pave
the way for renewed conflict in the future. So �... the issue is
not merely survival, but the way in which society chooses to
survive.' Revolutionary terrorism, is, secondly, undertaken
during campaigns for decolonisation or for the separation of a
distinct territory from within an independent country.
Here the terrorists again seek to induce
repression, which, they hope, will cause
the �parent� population to weary of the conflict and to
calculate that the costs of retaining the territory outweigh its
benefits. This has been more successful than terrorism in
the first situation, probably because it does not require
governments to vacate their central seats of power and therefore
demands less painful concessions. In the case of the United
Kingdom terrorism of this kind was a precipitating factor in its
withdrawal from Ireland, Palestine, Malaya and South Arabia. In
conclusion, terrorism in both contexts is designed to win
acceptance for a political aim by a significant section of the
population. Therefore, in liberal democracies at least, the
increase or decrease in popular support may be taken to be the
ultimate measure of success or failure for terrorists or
governments..."
*
International Law and the Use
of Force by National Liberation Movements
- Heather A Wilson, Oxford University Press, 1990 |