2012
DOI: 10.1080/13698249.2012.706950
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NATO's Intervention in the Afghan Civil War

Abstract: Afghanistan has provided NATO with its severest test of the post-Cold War period. The Alliance has set the end of 2014 as the target date for a withdrawal from combat operations and the consolidation of an Afghan lead in security provision throughout the country. It is an open question as to what the security situation will be once that crossroad is reached, but observation of progress since 2001 suggests that a lingering military stalemate is likely to persist unless and until a comprehensive political settle… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…Using 4GW approaches to neutralise the Afghan regimes and NATO forces, they adapted Mao’s guerrilla warfare techniques including ‘strategic defensive’ and ‘strategic stalemate’. Indeed, the neo-Taliban’s strategy resembles 4GW (Qazi, 2010; Sperling & Webber, 2012). 4GW fighters ‘seek to use international, transnational, national and sub-national networks for their own purposes’ (Hammes, 2005: 207).…”
Section: Fourth Generation Warfarementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Using 4GW approaches to neutralise the Afghan regimes and NATO forces, they adapted Mao’s guerrilla warfare techniques including ‘strategic defensive’ and ‘strategic stalemate’. Indeed, the neo-Taliban’s strategy resembles 4GW (Qazi, 2010; Sperling & Webber, 2012). 4GW fighters ‘seek to use international, transnational, national and sub-national networks for their own purposes’ (Hammes, 2005: 207).…”
Section: Fourth Generation Warfarementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The Taliban were able to co-opt or marginalise their rivals ‘by promoting defections among their local followers and by deploying their unique knowledge of Pashtun politics to diffuse opposition’ (Sinno, 2008: 76–7). This strategy was also followed by the neo-Taliban, who began infiltrating the Afghan population and gaining influence over it from 2003 onwards (Giustozzi, 2007: 99), starting to approach those villages and towns which they presumed to be hospitable for setting up bases and to establish parallel structures of administration, albeit rudimentary (Sperling & Webber, 2012).…”
Section: A Comparative Analysis Of the Taliban And Neo-taliban Movementsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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