1st Edition

Non-state Threats and Future Wars

Edited By Robert J. Bunker Copyright 2003
    208 Pages
    by Routledge

    208 Pages
    by Routledge

    The intent behind this book was to bring together a team of defence and national security scholars and real-world military and law enforcement operators to focus on the topic of "Non-State Threats and Future Wars". The book is divided into four main sections: The first concerns theory. The second section concerns non-state threats and case studies, providing an overview of non-state threats ranging from organized crime networks to cartels, gangs and warlords. The third section is based on counter-OPFOR (opposing force) strategies which detail advanced concepts, urban battlespace environmental perceptions, weaponry, intelligence preparation, networked force structure and C41. The fourth and final section contains an archival document from the late 1987 period concerning early Fourth Epoch War theory, and never before published interviews with Chechen commanders and officers who participated in combat operations against Russian forces in the 1994-96 war.

    Part 1 Theory: the transformation of war revisited, Martin van Creveld; the new warrior class revisited, Ralph Peters. Part 2 Non-state threats and case studies: transnational organized crime - law enforcement as a global battlespace, Mark Galeotti; drug cartels, street gangs and warlords, John P. Sullivan and Robert J. Bunker; private military companies - mercenaries for the 21st century, Thomas K. Adams; non-state actors in Colombia - threats to the state and to the hemisphere, Max G. Wanwaring; Kashmir, Pakistan and the war by terror, Jasjit Singh. Part 3 Counter-opfor strategies: battlespace dynamics, information warfare to netwar, and bond-relationship targeting, Robert J. Bunker; cleansing polluted seas - non-state threats and the urban environment, Russell W. Glenn; non-lethal and hyper-lethal weaponry, John B. Alexander and Charles Heal; intelligence preparation for operations, Matt Begert and Dan Lindsay; networked force structure and C4I, John P. Sullivan. Part 4 Archives: the structure of war - early fourth epoch war research, T. Lindsay Moore; view from the wolves' den - the Chechens and urban operations, David P. Dilegge and Matthew Van Konynenburg.

    Biography

    Robert J. Bunker

    'This book presents a blueprint for the military and law enforcement agencies of the US to innovate and prepare for the battles of World War IV. It is a comprehensive and intensely composed book on the subject of asymmetrical warfare as fought by non-state warriors.'

    David Bradford, Special Warfare

    'The authors recognize the new enemies of our nation, encourage innovative thinking in our institutions, demand that bureaucratic demarcations be overcome, and, above all, call for the creation (and growth) of smarter institutions ... this book should be required reading by those who serve in special warfare.'

    David Bradford, Special Warfare