"The Insurgent's Dilemma is one of the most important books on insurgency and political violence to appear in decades. David Ucko's analysis based on historical vignettes is clear and compelling. This book will help readers understand how to think about insurgent and terrorist organizations as the first step toward developing strategies in response to them"-- H.R. McMaster, former US National Security Advisor and author of Battlegrounds: The Fight to Defend the Free World"A brilliant effort. David Ucko has produced a compelling account of emerging trends in insurgency, as guerrillas adapt to changing social and political norms and technologies in an increasingly urban and connected world. For anyone interested in the future of insurgency, and in the evolving strategic approaches that insurgents are pioneering, this book is a must-read."--David Kilcullen, co-author of The Ledger: Accounting for Failure in Afghanistan"Iraq and Afghanistan may be past, but the threat of insurgency remains and will be weaponized by adversarial states.
Ucko provides a strategic blueprint for how to defeat the twenty-first-century insurgent, challenging orthodox assumptions. Groundbreaking."-- Sean McFate, Professor at Georgetown University and author of The New Rules of War"This is required reading for both scholars of insurgency and counterinsurgency strategists. After decades of stasis, the analytical literature on insurgency is experiencing a renaissance, driven by major shifts in the security environment and innovation by insurgent actors. Erudite, persuasive, and an important contribution." -- Steve Metz, Professor of National Security and Strategy, US Army War College"In his masterful analysis, Ucko outlines the most likely adaptations we can expect in insurgent strategy and for which we need to prepare urgently. An absolute must-read!"-- Isabelle Duyvesteyn, Professor of International Studies and Global History, Leiden University"An important new entry into the ongoing debate in military and strategic studies."-- Paul Rich, editor, Small Wars and Insurgencies "An analysis that ought to make readers think carefully about what leads to success in twenty-first-century irregular warfare.
" -- Matthew Ford, University of Sussex, author, with Andrew Hoskins, of Radical War"Contributes to the understanding of contemporary terrorism and would form an essential component of any curriculum for understanding both insurgency and counterinsurgency." -- Parameters"[The book] sets the stage for further academic, policymaker and military debates. This work is relevant for diverse readers." -- International Peacekeeping.