Theory of Guerilla Warfare
RevisionNotes.Co.Uk - Free Revision and Course Notes for UK Students
Home: IB: History: Causes, Practise and Effects of War: Theory of Guerilla Warfare
Revision Notes
GCSE
A-Level
University
IB
User Options
Search
My Revision Notes
Bookmark Page
Contribute
Contribute Work
Other Sites
AcademicDB
Essay Writing Help

Theory of Guerilla Warfare
Bookmark this page

Guerilla: Spanish for ‘little war’

    • Until 20th century it was used to supplement the actions of regular armies.

Guerilla warfare according to Mao Tse-Tung:

    • Organization Phase:
    • Build up a structure of ‘cadres’ to organize population support (‘agit-prop’ teams to develop popular awareness / use of ‘selective terror’ against government officials, to eliminate landlords and others the population disliked, and to deter informers.
    • Guerilla Phase:
    • Introduce guerilla attacks and ambushes (to acquire weapons and blow up infrastructure) à make it difficult for governments to maintain a military presence (creation of ‘liberated areas’)
    • Mobile War (Third Phase)
    • Amounted to civil war / force government forces to retreat to major cities until these were surrounded by a hostile countryside.

Facts about Guerilla Warfare:

    • Used where to engage in conventional warfare would mean defeat.
    • Developed in rural societies where Marxist style revolution was not possible b/c of the lack of a proletariat.
    • Guerrilla tactics are the ‘practical methods of achieving the strategic objectives’ (Che Guevara) including mobility, self-sufficiency, sabotage…
    • Must establish parallel structures of government
    • Aim must be the changing of an unjust society / shouldn’t be used until all peaceful methods of obtaining change have been exhausted (Che Guevara)
    • Must have support of people. (Mao’s metaphor of the guerilla fighter being the fish and the people the sea)
    • Most movements have a middle class leadership.

Why has it been the most common form of warfare since 1945?

    1. Struggle of Asian and African people against colonial rule which meant conventional warfare was out of the question.
    2. The areas of decolonialisation were suited to its use.
    3. Outlawing of war (through UN)
    4. Development of nuclear weapons meant that guerilla warfare was used as a ‘war by proxy’ btw the great powers.
    5. Advances in weaponry (more dangerous form of warfare)
    6. Suited with the politicization of the population
    7. The spreading of Marxism
    8. The development of the ‘Cold War
    • Established Gov. could rely on support of one of the super-powers
    • USSR and China used it to pose as liberators in most colonial conflicts
    1. Development of the Mass Media ß prevents the government forces from using all methods at their disposal.

Other Notes in this Category

  1. Castro's Guerilla War in Cuba
  2. Economic Consequences of WW1 and Reparations
  3. Guerilla Warfare Against the French in Vietnam 1946-1954
  4. Interwar European Economic Problems 1919-1939
  5. Terrorism
  6. The Causes of War
  7. The Great Depression and Economic Nationalism
  8. The Second Vietnam War 1960-1975 and American Involvement
  9. Theory of Guerilla Warfare
  10. World War One Peace Settlements

Didn't find this useful?

  • Visit Coursework.Info for over 14,000 GCSE, A-Level and University Essays

© UK-Learning 2001-3. Disclaimer, Feedback, Other Stuff.