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The U.S. Army/Marine Corps counterinsurgency field manual:

U.S. Army field manual no. 3-24 : Marine Corps warfighting publication no. 3-33.5, Issues 3-24 (Google eBook)
Front Cover
29 Reviews
University of Chicago Press, Jul 4, 2007 - History - 419 pages
When the U.S. military invaded Iraq, it  lacked a common understanding of the problems inherent in counterinsurgency campaigns. It had neither studied them, nor developed doctrine and tactics to deal with them. It is fair to say that in 2003, most Army officers knew more about the U.S. Civil War than they did about counterinsurgency.

The U.S. Army / Marine Corps Counterinsurgency Field Manual was written to fill that void. The result of unprecedented collaboration among top U.S. military experts, scholars, and practitioners in the field, the manual espouses an approach to combat that emphasizes constant adaptation and learning, the importance of decentralized decision-making, the need to understand local politics and customs, and the key role of intelligence in winning the support of the population. The manual also emphasizes the paradoxical and often counterintuitive nature of counterinsurgency operations: sometimes the more you protect your forces, the less secure you are; sometimes the more force you use, the less effective it is; sometimes doing nothing is the best reaction. 

An new introduction by Sarah Sewall, director of the Carr Center for Human Rights Policy at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government, places the manual in critical and historical perspective, explaining the significance and potential impact of this revolutionary challenge to conventional U.S. military doctrine.
An attempt by our military to redefine itself in the aftermath of 9/11 and the new world of international terrorism, The U.S. Army / Marine Corps Counterinsurgency Field Manual will play a vital role in American military campaigns for years to come.
 
The University of Chicago Press will donate a portion of the proceeds from this book to the Fisher House Foundation, a private-public partnership that supports the families of America’s injured servicemen. To learn more about the Fisher House Foundation, visit www.fisherhouse.org.
 
  

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Review: The US Army/Marine Corps Counterinsurgency Field Manual

User Review  - Anthony - Goodreads

A must read for anyone in the military or any civilian trying to understand the complexities of counterinsurgency. I enjoyed the introductions from well respected military and non-military experts on ... Read full review

Review: The US Army/Marine Corps Counterinsurgency Field Manual

User Review  - Dr. - Goodreads

So far this book has my head spinning. As much as this is a manual for effective counterinsurgency operations it also lays out a solid framework for understanding how effective insurgencies operate ... Read full review

Editorial Review - Library Journal vol. 132 iss. 14 p. 152 (c) 09/01/2007

In 1943, as part of its global World War II deployments, the United States stationed troops in Iraq. The brief handbook issued then, and now offered in facsimile, shows the army apprising troops of what to expect in Iraq and sketches its ethnic and religious makeup. Its primary purpose was to foster caution in interacting with a complex society with which Americans were unfamiliar. Sixty years later, the U.S. Army returned to Iraq, this time to defeat the Iraqi armed forces and assist in installing a new regime. The defeat of the Iraqi forces was quick and thorough, but the creation of a new political order was not. Faced with an insurgency in the wake of the conventional campaign, the United States floundered, hoping that it could translate its conventional superiority into success against an enemy that fought an unconventional war. The new Counterinsurgency Field Manual attempts to offer a formula for success. Its basis is that counterinsurgency warfare is a political struggle that has a military component, rather than a strictly military campaign. Counterinsurgency war is a struggle for legitimacy; the host government and its American allies must provide security and at least basic services in order to earn the population's confidence. The insurgents need merely to undermine the government by whatever means they can. The currently operative manual explains that American service personnel must be able quickly and precisely to calibrate their actions to a given situation. Ironically, our armed forces today find themselves needing the type of cultural sensitivity that was considered an obvious ingredient for success in 1943. It is likely that the new field manual will be in use for some time, and that the World War II instructions will often be cited as a comparison to it. Both are recommended for academic and public libraries.—Richard Fraser, formerly Coll. of Physicians of Philadelphia  

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