Humankind has always sought out innovative and new ways of waging war, establishing new forms of warfare. Set against a background of global strategic instability this process of innovation has, over the last two decades, produced a new and complex phenomenon, hybrid warfare. Distinct from other forms of modern warfare in several key aspects, it presents a unique challenge that appears to baffle policymakers and security experts, while giving the actors that employ it a new way of achieving their goals in the face of long-standing Western conventional, doctrinal, and strategic superiority.
The Hybrid Age analyses the phenomenon of hybrid warfare through theoretical frameworks and a range global case studies from the 2006 Lebanon War to the Russian intervention in Ukraine in 2014. This book aims to establish a unified theory of hybrid warfare, which not only outlines what the term means, but also places it in its context, and provides the tools which enable an observer to identify and react to a future instance of hybrid warfare.
Author(s): Brin Najžer
Publisher: I.B. Tauris
Year: 2020
Language: English
Pages: 248
Contents
Figures
About the author
Preface
Introduction
1 Theory of hybrid warfare
2 The definition of hybrid warfare
3 The hybrid framework and the quinity
4 Hybrid warfare strategy
5 Hezbollah and state-like hybrid warfare
6 Russia and hybrid warfare
7 South China Sea and non-kinetic maritime hybrid warfare
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index