22 research outputs found
Bandwagonistas: rhetorical re-description, strategic choice and the politics of counter-insurgency
This paper seeks to explore how a particular narrative focused on populationcentric counterinsurgency shaped American strategy during the Autumn 2009 Presidential review on Afghanistan, examine the narrativeâs genealogy
and suggest weaknesses and inconsistencies that exist within it. More precisely our ambition is to show how through a process of ârhetorical redescriptionâ
this narrative has come to dominate contemporary American
strategic discourse. We argue that in order to promote and legitimate their case, a contemporary âCOIN Lobbyâ of influential warrior scholars, academics and commentators utilizes select historical interpretations of counterinsurgency and limits discussion of COIN to what they consider to be failures in implementation. As a result, it has become very difficult for other
ways of conceptualizing the counterinsurgency problem to emerge into the policy debate