ABSTRACT

This book examines terrorist and insurgent organisations and seeks to understand how such groups persist for so long, while introducing a new strategic doctrine for countering these organisations.

The work discusses whether familial or meritocratic insurgencies are more resilient to counterinsurgency pressures. It argues that it is not the type of organization that determines resilience, but rather the efficiency functions of social capital and trust, which have different natures and forms, within them. It finds that while familial insurgencies can challenge incumbents from the start, they weaken over time, whereas meritocracies will generally strengthen. The book examines four of the most enduring and lethal insurgent organizations: the Haqqani Network in Afghanistan, Lashkar-e-Taiba in Pakistan, Jemaah Islamiyah in Indonesia, and the Abu Sayyaf in the Philippines. The author breaks down each group into its formative strengths and vulnerabilities and presents a bespoke model of strategic counterintelligence that can be used to manipulate, degrade and destroy each organization.

This book will be of much interest to students of counterinsurgency, terrorism, intelligence, security and defence studies in general.

part I|60 pages

Introduction to insurgency and the function of organizations

chapter 1|25 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|33 pages

The foundations of resilience

part II|196 pages

Real world analysis

chapter 3|45 pages

The Haqqani Network

chapter 4|42 pages

Lashkar-e-Taiba

chapter 5|53 pages

Jemaah Islamiyah

chapter 6|38 pages

Abu Sayyaf

chapter 7|16 pages

Findings

part III|32 pages

A new approach

chapter 8|30 pages

Strategic counterintelligence