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Unrestricted Warfare: Two Air Force Senior Colonels on Scenarios for War and the Operational Art in an Era of Globalization [1] (simplified Chinese: 超限战; traditional Chinese: 超限戰; lit. 'warfare beyond bounds') is a book on military strategy written in 1999 by two colonels in the People's Liberation Army (PLA), Qiao Liang (乔良) and Wang Xiangsui (王湘穗). [2]
Whisky War: 17 December 1973: 14 June 2022: 48 years, 5 months and 4 weeks Cabinda War: 8 November 1975: Ongoing: 49 years, 3 months, 1 week and 5 days Wars of the Diadochi: 322 BC: 275 BC: 47 years [11] Caucasian War: 1817: 1864: 47 years Afghanistan conflict: 27 April 1978: Ongoing: 46 years, 9 months, 3 weeks and 3 days [citation needed]
Air Power, Insurgency and the "War on Terror" Airpower and the environment; Armed Insurrection; Arming Mother Nature: The Birth of Catastrophic Environmentalism; The Art of War (Machiavelli book) The Art of War; Arthashastra
War between the U.S.-led NATO and Afghanistan ended when Hamid Karzai was elected by an Afghan loya jirga to the presidency of the Transitional Islamic State of Afghanistan on June 19, 2002. Since June 19, 2002, the conflict became non-international after U.S.-led NATO and Afghan forces fought the Taliban insurgency part of / also called ...
He was sentenced to death during World War I (later commuted to 25 years hard labor) for desertion and spreading propaganda. [5] Right of self-defence – maintains (based on rational self-interest) that the use of retaliatory force is justified against repressive nations that break the zero aggression principle. In addition, if a free country ...
The faults, he says, are mainly caused by the game publishers' and guide publishers' haste to get their products on to the market; [5] "[previously] strategy guides were published after a game was released so that they could be accurate, even to the point of including information changes from late game 'patch' releases.
Internal evidence, including the addition of "Saracens" to the list of enemies, suggests a date around the mid-seventh century. [14] Syrianus Magister (formerly the "Sixth-Century Byzantine Anonymous" or Anonymus Byzantinus) wrote a large, wide-ranging military compendium employing Aelians and Onosander and to a lesser extent Arrian. Three ...
Millett, Allan R, "A Reader's Guide To The Korean War" Journal of Military History (1997) Vol. 61 No. 3; p. 583+ full text in JSTOR; free online revised version; Millett, Allan R. "The Korean War: A 50 Year Critical Historiography," Journal of Strategic Studies 24 (March 2001), pp. 188–224. full text in Ingenta and Ebsco