

An edition of The Dragons and the Snakes (2020)
How the Rest Learned to Fight the West
By David Kilcullen
Publish Date
Mar 03, 2020
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Language
eng
Pages
336
Description:
This book applies concepts from evolutionary science and military innovation to explore how state and nonstate adversaries of the Western powers have learned to defeat (or render irrelevant) the model of high-tech, expensive, precision warfare pioneered by the United States in 1991 and globally dominant since. The book begins with a historical overview of the period since the Cold War, framed by CIA Director James Woolsey’s 1993 comment that “we have slain a large dragon” (the Soviet Union) “but now we find ourselves in a jungle filled with a bewildering variety of poisonous snakes, and in many ways the dragon was easier to keep track of.” The book describes the selective pressures acting on adversaries as a result of the evolutionary fitness landscape created by western military dominance. It then explores ideas from social and evolutionary science—including social learning, natural selection, artificial selection, predator effects, and the distinction between concept-led peacetime innovation and wartime coevolution —to explain how adversaries adapt. It presents a series of case studies on nonstate actors (including Al Qaeda, Hezbollah, and Islamic State), Russia, and China, as well as sections on North Korea and Iran. The book concludes by considering how western powers can respond to the increasing ineffectiveness of their military model and examines likely strategic futures.
subjects: International relations, military innovation, adaptation, liminal warfare, unconventional warfare, political warfare, coevolution, Military planning--United States--History--21st century, Irregular warfare, Security, International--History--21st century, United States--Military policy, United States--Politics and government--2017-2021
People: R. James Woolsey (1941-)
Places: Iraq, Afghanistan, Russia (Federation), China (Peoples' Republic of China, 1949- ), Taiwan Strait
Times: 1991-2019