Recent attempts to revive counterinsurgency strategies for use in Afghanistan and Iraq have been marked by a determination to learn lessons from history. Using the case of the campaign against the Mau Mau insurgency in Kenya of 1952-60, this article considers the reasons for this engagement with the past and the issues that have emerged as a consequence. The article disputes the lessons from British colonial history that have been learned by military planners, most obviously the characterization of nonmilitary forms of British counterinsurgency as nonviolent. Although it contests some of these supposed precedents for successful counterinsurgency in British military history, the article also identifies more generalizable elements of the Keny...
Counter-insurgency assumed a status during the twentieth century as one of the British military‟s fo...
This thesis examines the British army and its legacy of counterinsurgency from the 20th century. I...
The conduct of British soldiers in wars of decolonisation has never been of greater historiographica...
British Army counterinsurgency campaigns were supposedly waged within the bounds of international la...
British Army counterinsurgency campaigns were supposedly waged within the bounds of international la...
This article argues that the Aden Insurgency was a pivotal moment in the history of British counter-...
This issue of the journal is dedicated to articles on the history of colonial counter-insurgency. Th...
The four key components of British Army counter insurgency (COIN) doctrine such as legal context, th...
This thesis fills a significant gap in current secondary literature on post-war British defence and ...
This article details two largely unreported atrocities by British forces operating against Arab rebe...
Insurgencies are the new normal of warfare in this emerging century. Of course, resistance against ...
The author examines the British experience in building and training indigenous police and military f...
This book details the devastating Mau Mau civil war fought in Kenya during the 1950s and the legacie...
This article argues that the British government's deliberate exclusion of international law from col...
Recent research on Palestine, Kenya, and Malaya has emphasised the coercive nature of ‘Britain’s dir...
Counter-insurgency assumed a status during the twentieth century as one of the British military‟s fo...
This thesis examines the British army and its legacy of counterinsurgency from the 20th century. I...
The conduct of British soldiers in wars of decolonisation has never been of greater historiographica...
British Army counterinsurgency campaigns were supposedly waged within the bounds of international la...
British Army counterinsurgency campaigns were supposedly waged within the bounds of international la...
This article argues that the Aden Insurgency was a pivotal moment in the history of British counter-...
This issue of the journal is dedicated to articles on the history of colonial counter-insurgency. Th...
The four key components of British Army counter insurgency (COIN) doctrine such as legal context, th...
This thesis fills a significant gap in current secondary literature on post-war British defence and ...
This article details two largely unreported atrocities by British forces operating against Arab rebe...
Insurgencies are the new normal of warfare in this emerging century. Of course, resistance against ...
The author examines the British experience in building and training indigenous police and military f...
This book details the devastating Mau Mau civil war fought in Kenya during the 1950s and the legacie...
This article argues that the British government's deliberate exclusion of international law from col...
Recent research on Palestine, Kenya, and Malaya has emphasised the coercive nature of ‘Britain’s dir...
Counter-insurgency assumed a status during the twentieth century as one of the British military‟s fo...
This thesis examines the British army and its legacy of counterinsurgency from the 20th century. I...
The conduct of British soldiers in wars of decolonisation has never been of greater historiographica...