244 Pages
by Routledge

244 Pages
by Routledge

244 Pages
by Routledge

This book, first published in 1969, casts a critical eye over the problem of insurgency. The author sees insurgency not just as a matter of technique – military tactics or organizational skill – nor as the result of ‘force and fraud’, but as ‘people’s war’: the conditions in which the mass of the people become involved, voluntarily or otherwise, on either side. He quotes Nasution’s statement,... Read more

1. The Scene. Revolution and Intervention in South East Asia  1.1. Communist Revolts: 1948  1.2. Sino-Soviet Dispute: (People’s) War and Peace  1.3. US Reaction: the Vietnam Commitment  1.4. Indonesia Reversal: New Balance of Power?  1.5. Domino-Land  2. The Model. China: Conditions for Success  2.1. Peasant Revolt: Mao’s Separate Course  2.2. Protracted War  2.3. National Appeal  2.4. Downfall of the Regime  3. Success. Struggle for Vietnam  3.1. August Insurrection  3.2. Resistance War  3.3. Unity and Organization  3.4. Vietminh-Vietcong  4. Failure  4.1. China in Maphilindo  4.2. Lessons from Malaya and the Philippines  4.3. Indonesian Exception  4.4. United States in Indochina  4.5. Post-War Policy  4.6. Confusion in Laos  4.7. Backing into Vietnam  4.8. Peace – and the Tet Offensive

Biography

J.L.S. Girling