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Guerrilla Warfare
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Guerrilla warfare refers to irregular military tactics employed by smaller, often non-state forces against conventional armies or occupying powers. It appears as a subject across political science, military history, international relations, and security studies courses. What makes it academically compelling is the tension it creates between conventional military doctrine and asymmetric conflict, forcing students to examine how power, legitimacy, and violence intersect. The topic connects naturally to broader questions about revolution, state authority, terrorism, and the ethics of armed resistance, making it relevant to both historical and contemporary policy discussions.

The papers archived on this topic reflect a wide range of approaches. Historical analysis is prominent, with work examining conflicts such as the Soviet-Afghan War and America's rise as a military power, tracing how irregular warfare shaped outcomes over time. Policy and ethical angles appear in essays on domestic terrorism, international terrorist organizations, and the Phoenix Program, a counterinsurgency effort that raises serious moral questions. Comparative and regional approaches also feature, including examinations of child soldiers in Burundi and Sudan and factors driving suicide terrorism, suggesting that students frequently analyze guerrilla tactics within specific geographic or political contexts rather than in the abstract.

A strong essay on guerrilla warfare needs a focused thesis that moves beyond simply describing tactics to arguing something about their causes, effectiveness, or consequences. Evidence drawn from specific conflicts, policy documents, or established military history carries the most weight. One common pitfall is conflating guerrilla warfare with terrorism without carefully distinguishing the two concepts, a confusion that undermines analytical precision and weakens any argument about strategy, legitimacy, or state response.

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Paper Doctorate
Kennedy and Flexible Response so
In this essay, the author will examine the empirical question of whether or not the doctrine of flexible response worked during the Kennedy Administration to respond globally to communist expansion, especially to guerrilla warfare. With the resurgence of Cold War tensions with Russia and China, it would do well to remember earlier days in an earlier Cold War. The central question is whether the tension between America's democratic institutions and its duties as a superpower can be balanced off against each other. In the proposal section, the author will propose a similar examination of the period in the wake of 9/11 and the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq to see if the same issues exist now and if we have learned anything, especially with regard to extraordinary impositions upon civilian constitutional rights.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Domestic Terrorism Has Been Regarded
Domestic Terrorism has been regarded in recent times to be one of the most important threats facing internal security in the U.S. In order to have a complex view on the terrorist phenomenon taking place inside the…
Research Paper Doctorate
Airline terrorism: security threats and prevention strategies
As the name implies, terrorism is an attempt to provoke fear and intimidation. Therefore, terrorist acts are intended to attract wide publicity and provoke public shock, outrage, and/or fear.
Paper Undergraduate
Strategy: How Relevant Is Counterinsurgency
¶ … Strategy: How Relevant is counterinsurgency doctrine to the "war on terrorism"?
Essay Doctorate
Che Guevara's revolutionary involvement: perspectives from Cuba, Africa, and superpowers
Che Guevara was born as Ernesto Guevara de la Serna in 1928 to a middle-class family (Castaneda 1998, 3). He was Argentinean by birth but was later awarded with an honorary Cuban citizenship in recognition of his contribution towards the armed struggle in the Cuban revolution. Studying to become a doctor, Guevara became influenced by Marxist ideals and teachings upon a motorbike trip across South America at the age of twenty-four where he observed the exploitation and deprivation of the poor people under capitalism (Castaneda 1998, 50). He became a champion of the class struggle against capitalism on an international level. He joined Fidel Castro in 1955 in overthrowing the Cuban government of Batista. Subsequently, he became an important figure in Cuban diplomacy and a vocal critic of the United States and the Soviet Union. Later on he helped revolutionary groups in Congo and Bolivia until he was captured and executed by the Bolivian Army and the CIA in 1967 (Castaneda 1998, 326).
Paper Masters
Current conflict in Afghanistan
The conflict began when the U.S. And Great Britain invaded Afghanistan in 2001, after the attacks upon the World Trade Towers by the Al-Qaeda terrorist organization.
Essay Doctorate
Guerrilla Warfare Counterinsurgency Directly Apply Post-9/11 Terrorist
¶ … guerrilla warfare counterinsurgency directly apply post-9/11 terrorist problem faced U.S. 2.
Research Paper Doctorate
Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge
"An occurrence at owl Creek Bridge' is a literary work that has undertones of civil rights movement woven into a plot that is infused with elements of realism, illusion, and imagination.
Paper Doctorate
Che Brief Biography of Che
Communism has lost its international appeal since the death of the Soviet empire. Fidel Castro is discredited, and Cuba is an island of repression in a sea of capitalist expansion taking place within almost all formerly…
Research Paper Doctorate
Rome versus Carthage: conflict and rivalry
The earliest evidence of human habitation in the city of Rome dates to 1500 BC. However, the earliest established, permanent settlements began to form in the 8th century BC. At that time, archaeology indicates two…