Guerrilla warfare: Difference between revisions
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'''Guerilla warfare''' is a set of strategic, operational, and tactical actions, within a political context, taken against an enemy in territory dominated by that enemy. Enemy forces are expected to be stronger than the guerrilla force, either because the area of operations is the enemy's home area, or an area that he occupies. | '''Guerrilla warfare''' (also known as '''Guerilla warfare''') is a set of strategic, operational, and tactical actions, within a political context, taken against an enemy in territory dominated by that enemy. Enemy forces are expected to be stronger than the guerrilla force, either because the area of operations is the enemy's home area, or an area that he occupies. | ||
The term originated in the [[Peninsular War]], from the Spanish word for war, ''guerrero''; "guerrilla" is "little war". | The term originated in the [[Peninsular War]], from the Spanish word for war, ''guerrero''; "guerrilla" is "little war". In usage, both "guerilla" and "guerrilla" are correct, but "guerrilla" is the more common of the two spellings and more closely follows the root word. | ||
Since the enemy is stronger, the | Since the enemy is stronger, the guerrilla force must fight only on terms favorable to the guerrilla; guerrilla warfare, although centuries old, is, in modern terms, [[asymmetrical warfare]]. In its ever-present political dimension, it is a form of [[insurgency]]. | ||
{{quotation|"The enemy advances, we retreat; the enemy camps, we harass; the enemy tires, we attack; the enemy retreats, we pursue."|[[Mao Zedong]]<ref name=MaoStrat>{{citation | {{quotation|"The enemy advances, we retreat; the enemy camps, we harass; the enemy tires, we attack; the enemy retreats, we pursue."|[[Mao Zedong]]<ref name=MaoStrat>{{citation | ||
| last = Mao | first = Tse-tung | | last = Mao | first = Tse-tung |
Revision as of 16:49, 18 February 2010
Guerrilla warfare (also known as Guerilla warfare) is a set of strategic, operational, and tactical actions, within a political context, taken against an enemy in territory dominated by that enemy. Enemy forces are expected to be stronger than the guerrilla force, either because the area of operations is the enemy's home area, or an area that he occupies.
The term originated in the Peninsular War, from the Spanish word for war, guerrero; "guerrilla" is "little war". In usage, both "guerilla" and "guerrilla" are correct, but "guerrilla" is the more common of the two spellings and more closely follows the root word.
Since the enemy is stronger, the guerrilla force must fight only on terms favorable to the guerrilla; guerrilla warfare, although centuries old, is, in modern terms, asymmetrical warfare. In its ever-present political dimension, it is a form of insurgency.
"The enemy advances, we retreat; the enemy camps, we harass; the enemy tires, we attack; the enemy retreats, we pursue." — Mao Zedong[1]
Guerrillas frequently do not wear uniform and hide among sympathetic civilians, so they are may be in violation of lawful combatant status of the Third Geneva Convention. They claim military necessity for this approach, as they would be annihilated in conventional combat.
U.S. and NATO doctrine
The U.S. military doctrine for operating as a guerrilla is unconventional warfare (United States doctrine), while the doctrine for counterguerrilla operations is Foreign Internal Defense.
References
- ↑ Mao, Tse-tung (1967), Problems of Strategy in China's Revolutionary War, Selected Works of Mao Tse-tung, vol. I, Foreign Languages Press, at 179-254