1. Introduction; 2. Irregular warfare 101; Part I. The American Revolution to Chasing Sandino, 1776–1930s: 3. The American Revolution; 4. Confederates and Indians; 5. Intermezzo: the Boer War; 6. America, Aguinaldo, and the Philippines, 1898; 7. Chasing Villa, 1916; 8. A cold winter in Siberia; 9. The Banana Wars, 1898–1930s; 10. Intermezzo: T. E. Lawrence and the Arab Revolt, 1916–18; 11. Chasing Sandino, 1927–32; Part II. The Cold War, 1940s–1989: 12. Cold War counterinsurgencies; 13. Intermezzo: Mao Zedong; 14. Fighting communism in Greece; 15. Intermezzo: France in Algeria, 1954–62; 16. Intermezzo: David Galula; 17. Intermezzo: Malaya emergency, 1948–60; 18. Ramón Magsaysay and the Hukbalahap Rebellion in the Philippines, 1946–56; 19. Vietnam; Part III. Latin America and the Cold War, 1950s–1980s: 20. From Guatemala, 1954, to Cuba and the Bay of Pigs, 1961; 21. Guatemala, post-1963; 22. Cuba, post-1963; 23. Intermezzo: Che Guevara and guerrilla warfare; 24. Carter, Reagan, and the Sandinista revolution in Nicaragua, 1979–90; 25. El Salvador, 1979–92; Part IV. Post–Cold War, 1990s–2000s: 26. Dirty wars after the Cold War; 27. Colombia; 28. Iraq; 29. Intermezzo: the counterinsurgency field manual and postmodern insurgencies; 30. Post-9/11 COIN in the Philippines; 31. Intermezzo: Afghanistan, graveyard of empires; 32. The longest war: America in Afghanistan; 33. The fall of Muammar Qaddafi, 2011; 34. Intermezzo: JSOC raids and drone strikes; 35. Conclusion.
This book examines the long, complex experience of American involvement in irregular warfare.
Russell Crandall is a Professor of International Politics and American Foreign Policy at Davidson College. His previous books include The United States and Latin America after the Cold War (Cambridge, 2008); Gunboat Democracy: US Interventions in the Dominican Republic, Grenada, and Panama (2006); and Driven by Drugs: US Policy Toward Colombia (2008). Interwoven with his academic career, Crandall has held high-level foreign policy appointments within several sectors of the US government, including the Joint Chiefs of Staff and Office of the Secretary of Defense at the Pentagon and the National Security Council at the White House.
'Russell Crandall has provided us with an extremely valuable
history of America's involvement in 'dirty wars' throughout our
history - with vignettes of comparison with similar engagements by
other nations. He documents events dimly remembered, if at all. He
usefully explores the political and ethical difficulty of
effectively pursuing such campaigns in a democratic state
ostensibly committed to human rights and respect for the rule of
law.' Martin L. Cook, Admiral James Bond Stockdale Chair of
Professional Military Ethics, US Naval War College
'A fascinating account and analysis, one that displays both a
remarkable range of command and includes a steady stream of stories
well told. Crandall punctures some of the myths about American
counterinsurgency, even while showing why we've never been able to
avoid it for long.' Daniel Kurtz-Phelan, Fellow, New America
Foundation; former member of the Secretary of State's Policy
Planning Staff
'Although waging irregular wars has become unpopular of late, such
conflicts cannot be wished away. Russell Crandall's America's Dirty
Wars provides an exhaustive historical account of the United
States' successes and failures in combating elusive foes. He
demonstrates that although success in these wars is hardly assured,
neither is it impossible.' Thomas G. Mahnken, Jerome E. Levy Chair
of Economic Geography and National Security, US Naval War
College
'Russell Crandall's gracefully written America's Dirty Wars not
only provides a clear and valuable account of the many irregular
conflicts in which the United States has been entangled since its
eighteenth-century Revolution, it also shows how the country has
learned - and failed to learn - from its own history.' Michael
Mandelbaum, Christian A. Herter Professor of American Foreign
Policy, The Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies,
and author of The Road to Global Prosperity
'Russell Crandall has quickly established himself as a leader in a
new generation of social science/foreign policy analysts. His
latest book is a sweeping but focused overview and analysis of one
of the more fascinating aspects of American history -
counterinsurgency warfare. Crandall's goal is to provide a
panoramic view of the US experience in dirty wars - lessons
learned, lessons forgotten. Through his sophisticated research and
effective presentation, Crandall fully offers the most
comprehensive work of its kind to date. I recommend this volume
without hesitation.' Riordan Roett, Director of the Latin American
Studies Program and Western Hemisphere Studies, The Johns Hopkins
University
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