The Four Horsemen of Change: Politics, Economics, Technology and Security

(This commentary was first published on the IPCS website on 10 October 2013. The commentary is a response to a speech delivered by former Foreign Secretary and current chairman of the National Security Advisory Board, Mr. Shyam Saran, on 11 August 2013 at the 18th Annual Prem Bhatia Memorial Lecture.) 

By 

Vice Admiral (retd) Vijay Shankar

In his discourse at the Prem Bhatia Memorial lecture on 11 August 2013, Mr Shyam Saran a former Foreign Secretary and current chairman of the National Security Advisory Board noted with some precision that the transformed landscape that we live in has been driven by change. Powered by technological advancements, an ever accelerating chain reaction fuels the impulse to alter and remodel. But when he ventures to suggest that the recent global economic and financial crisis was on account of the “mismatch between the scale of technological change and the adaptability of institutions both domestic and global governance” he is on thin ice. While it is discernible that economic globalization has far outpaced political thought; but to affirm that it is at the root of the recent global down turn flies in the face of the boom of the nineties and the current recovery despite mismatch.

Change and uncertainty are the abiding features of the world we live in. Great transformations are hardly ones that occur as “we slept”; on the contrary it is a gradual process that begins with an idea, translates to societal consensus and establishes itself as an enhancing economic and political lever. So to view change through its immediate symptoms alone will leave the observer with an imperfect picture of the whole and perplexity at the unforeseen. Seemingly tectonic changes of the present stimulated by globalisation and the information revolution are familiar in history. Addressing the issue of change and the sweeping formation of nation states, Arnold Toynbee in his A Study of History asserts that “the Industrial Revolution, like the Athenian economic revolution in Hellenic history, had the effect of replacing a parochial economic autarky by an ecumenical economic interdependency … (and then with biting irony he adds) At the time of writing, midway through the twentieth century, this political challenge had not been successfully met”.

At the heart of our own inability to come to grips with change is the inconsistency between reality and our understanding of it. Reality is that globalization and the spread of technology promotes material values over other values, particularly those related to the very condition of life; politically it demands selective surrender of sovereignty and acceptance that economic growth may well be discriminatory as opposed to an illusory belief in synchronous growth. This not only results in persistent friction within the internals of the nation, but also instability in the security externals of the nation. The upshot of relentless sponsorship of material values is that economic globalization has far outpaced its political soul. What the world today is confronted with is the chaotic, uncoordinated nature of global governance whose array of institutions and agreements are loaded in their ability to adjudicate and weak on equity. This places a premium on power as the tool to stabilize.

The emerging landscape, Saran astutely notes, is dominated by three domains: the terrestrial as defined by maritime space, extra terrestrial which is space related and cyber space that extends along both terrestrial and extra terrestrial. Resource security he argues is linked with maritime security. The opening of the North and North Eastern Passages will indeed redefine the way we look at the oceans and how we structure maritime forces. What he let pass is Antarctica and how technologies will make resource access viable with the attendant potential for friction (after all did Britain wage war in the Falklands for sheep?!). In all this the critical union of maritime activities with terrestrial security would appear to have fallen between the cracks. As far as space is concerned, its weaponising is well underway and any attempt at turning back the clock can only be futile. A more pragmatic resolution is to bring about doctrinal balance in this domain. Cyber space presents a more complex sphere; it cuts across and deeply influences all the attributes of power. Given its all pervasive nature there can be no debate over the urgent need for regulatory regimes and exacting governance. The USA today overshadows all three domains; the rise of a new hegemon invariably will be accompanied by turbulence.

In the cauldron of change there is another insidious crisis that hinders developing societies drawing alongside the developed world; this relates to financial capacity to invest in education, fundamental research, technology and the social sciences. While considerable efforts are applied in countries such as China and India for appropriation of monies into these sectors, it remains a continuous predicament to make compromises between the demands of the future at the cost of the present.

When China articulates its objective of harmonious growth, on the face of it, there is a suggestion to reconcile global governance with international aspirations and structure an impartial world order shorn of hegemons. The dilemma is that the idea of the nation state stands in bitter conflict with international collectivism led by one state. And if reconciliation is through revision, and awkwardly, world order to China’s measure and its perspectives on competitive resource access and a contemporaneous access denial military strategy, then there is deliberate faith in power to restore balance. This encapsulates one of the cardinal features of the current state of international order. In this strategic context to transform competitive principles to collaborative values can only remain a vision that we hold firm to.

The Prem Bhatia Memorial Lecture 2013 delivered by Mr. Shyam Saran may be accessed here. 

 

The Strategic Evolution of the Indian Naval Fleet Air Arm

By Vice Admiral (Retd.) Vijay Shankar

Keywords: Indian Naval Fleet Arm, Indian Naval Force Structuring, UAV Carriers, Indian Naval Strategic Planning, INS Vikrant, Robotics, Operational Dilemmas, Unifying Theory

Download full article here. 

Excerpts:

In the Beginning, an Absence of a Unifying Theory

In 1946, with impending Indian independence looming large, the interim Prime Minister Nehru commissioned a British adviser Mr Wansborough Jones to recommend the scientific and organisational measures required to make India a self supporting defence entity. This Report was preceded by the AV Hill Report of 1944 and succeeded by the Blackett Report of 1948. It is hardly the names that are important, however what is significant is the intellectual insights that motivated these reports which in turn influenced the evolution of the Navy and in particular the Fleet Air Arm.[i]

By specialisation the first was a defence scientist, the second a bureaucrat while the third an operational research analyst; what they lacked in common was the absence of professional and empirical acumen. And so predictably central to what drove their appraisal was compromise of needs, optimization of Commonwealth surpluses and, curiously, economising on security through a strange faith in collectivism despite the specific vision which saw India as a “self supporting defence entity” and even if it meant playing down threats and challenges that reality presented. All three reports lacked a unifying theory that linked strategic thought with force planning.  Then again in contrast was the Vice Admiral Godfrey (C-in-C of the Royal Indian Navy) Plan of 1944 which outlined a strategic vision of energy security, sea denial capability, sea control of western and eastern approaches to the North Indian Ocean and selective maritime air strike and reconnaissance capability in support of surface forces.[ii] Force development was envisaged over a ten year period in two phases, Phase 1 foresaw surface forces for escort and patrol missions while Phase 2 visualized a Denial and Control capability. Intrinsic to Phase 2 was an air component with surveillance and strike potential. By 1948, the Plan was pruned, by Vice Admiral Edward Parry the then Commander in Chief and Chief of the Naval Staff, to a 47 ship Navy from 69 ships, centred on two aircraft carriers. Indian Naval Plans Paper 1 owes its origin to a compromise between the articulations of the five worthies mentioned earlier; the non professionals as represented by the scientist-bureaucrat-analyst combine on the one hand while the Godfrey-Parry professional bloc as tailored by the British Admiralty depicted the experts view. In any case the blue print for the Plan was drafted in Whitehall.

The appropriate level of resources that ought to be dedicated to national security is naturally a subject of debate. However, what is an imperative is a comprehensive methodology that helps the planner to identify national interests and objectives which are the ends of policy and how best resources and national assets can be mobilised to achieve these in the face of challenges and threats. From this a plan of action must emerge and the necessary military posture attained to support the plan. This codifies what may be termed as the ‘strategic approach’.[iii] Such a slant was absent.

Skewed Planning and Incoherent Acquisitions

The contrary pulls within planning, unsurprisingly, tilted towards an illusory faith in compromised security, a civil-military disconnect and a misplaced conviction in internationalism. Politically it was a statesmanlike like expression of a war weary leadership which saw in the post war global order notional prospects for pacifism.  But militarily it left the defence forces and in particular the Navy with a ‘moth eaten’ second hand force structure made up of disparate units bereft of a guiding strategic soul and predisposed to an all consuming dependence.

Planning gone seriously awry and the onset of strategic insomnia was never more obvious than in the early years and particularly so in the future of Indian Naval Aviation. The acquisition of two aircraft carriers, which were originally envisaged to form the core of a sea control potential, and maritime patrol and strike capability to compliment the carrier group were placed on the ‘back burner’. Reasons ranged from lack of resources, outbreak of the Korean war to British reluctance to release second hand carriers.[iv] None of these arguements made for a strategic rationale since alternate sources or indigenous or joint ventures were never examined, neither were innovative solutions such as conversion or reconstitution of a cruiser or commercial hull explored; after all most early World War II aircraft carriers were based on reconstitution of warships or merchantmen hulls.[v] Between the two World Wars Britain, France, Japan and the USA reconstituted over 12 existing warship hulls to aircraft carriers. While in the immediate run up to the Second World War and up to 1943 Britain alone refitted over 30 merchantmen hulls for duties as Escort Carriers of the “Ruler” and “Archer” class. These Carriers displaced 10,000 to 15,000 tons, some were equipped with arrester gear and “accelerators” (the forerunner of the catapult) all were capable of operating frontline naval combat aircrafts of that era. While USA, in the same period converted 13 mercantile hulls to the “Charger” and “Long Island” class Escort Aircraft Carriers; displacing about 10,000 tons capable of carrying 30 fighters aircrafts.[vi]

What is being posited is that there was no material reason not to pursue the Professional Plan. Besides the technological gap in the late 1940s was relatively less wide as compared to the 1960s and ship conversion of the nature discussed earlier was well within the technical capabilities of our major shipyards.[vii] The downstream effect of such a strategic decision would have given the vital energy needed for our warship building and collateral industries to stand on its feet. In its place was an incoherent training and recruitment scheme alongside a shore based aviation acquisition plan that relegated naval aviation to auxiliary status and directionless expansion such as target towing and communications link aircrafts (all of which could have better been done by the Air force and may have even sown the seeds of jointness).[viii] How else does one explain the possession and basing of Sealand amphibious aircrafts at Cochin when their most advantageous operational utilisation was in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands; in the event, through the Sealand’s service life, they were never deployed in the islands.

[…]

Four Operational Dilemmas

The coming of age of Indian naval aviation runs concurrent with four key operational developments. The first is that technological advances, contrary to conditions that prevailed for most of the last century, are in a continuous state of outpacing operational thought. As a consequence of which the planner must seek not just to make accurate technological forecasts and capture appropriate technologies but also to expound operational concepts that would best exploit these technologies. The second dilemma is centred on the ability to offset mass by precision; this poses a very real problem to the practitioner since hardware now had to not only convincingly dispel any “fog of war” but also come to advantageous grips with the possibility of failure. The third is the emerging transparency of the battle space which reduces the scope for cardinal principles of surprise, concentration and mobility of forces to be applied in an operational engagement with any probability of success; it also increases the significance of doctrinal integrity. The last quandary is the enlarging gap between the offense and the defence which invariably makes a persuasive case to take the offensive in all circumstances.

The future will persistently be beset by the challenges posed by the four operational dilemmas. These will have to be resolved and tempered keeping in mind a contrary pull that demands naval aviation embrace affordability. Affordability is generally driven by three elements – the acquisition cost to develop and buy platforms, the operating and maintenance cost to bring the full weight of the fleet air arm to bear over their entire service life and most importantly, priority in force planning.

The Robotic Revolution

On 09 October 1903 a curious editorial appeared in the New York Times; it prophesised that “The flying machine which might really fly might be evolved by the combined and continuous efforts of mathematicians and mechanicians in from one to 10 million years.” Yet that very same day, two brothers who owned a bicycle shop in Ohio started assembling the very first aeroplane. Seven years later the first flying machine flew off a wooden platform built on the bows of the USS Birmingham.[ix] The era of naval aviation was not only at hand but had achieved it with silence, surreptitiousness, with capricious rapidity and transformatory impact that we have come to associate technology with. So it is with robotics which has so unerringly crept into every aspect of naval aviation that from complimenting manned flights it is on the cusp of replacing the man in the cockpit.

Contemporary unmanned systems entering into the fleet are potentially capable of undertaking the entire spectrum of combat tasks. For instance, the role of long range maritime surveillance and patrol is being taken over by unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV) such as the Heron (currently in service with the Indian Navy, payload 250 kg, endurance 30-52 hours, all up weight 1 ton) and the US Global Hawk. The latter with a wingspan of 35 metres and an all up weight of over 10 tons it has an endurance of over 24 hours, while carrying 3,000 pounds of electro-optical, infrared and synthetic aperture radar sensors, at heights of over 65,000 feet, the system provides persistent maritime surveillance, intelligence gathering, data collection and dissemination at theatre level. To its abiding advantage, the UAV is not restricted by crew fatigue, rigorous and costly safety considerations, it is economical and awkward issues related to risk taking do not come to play. While these long range UAVs operate from a land bases, the Navy is also working to integrate many of its ships at sea to operate smaller systems like the Searcher and the Nishant. Able to take off and land autonomously from any warship with a small deck, its payload includes thermal imagers, radar, high-powered video cameras and a laser designator that can fix targets to be struck by the mother ship’s weapons or by a cooperating armed UAV or manned fighter. With a range of over 200 miles, the surveillance zone of the surface force is greatly multiplied.

The centrepiece of future plans for unmanned systems at sea must be steered to carrier-launched surveillance and strike fighters. This type of robotic plane is specially designed to take on and take over the human pilot roles. Without a cockpit, and in some cases, even no tail fins and planes, such systems vary drastically from our traditional notions of an aeroplane. But these same attributes theoretically give them capabilities well beyond even some of the latest manned strike fighters. Designed to be especially stealthy for the more hazardous roles such as enemy air defence penetration, they potentially can launch precision guided munitions, can be handed over between different remote human operators at extended ranges and provide for prolonged periods (30-50 hours) on scouting tasks. They also promise to lighten the stress on human operators.

For all the anticipation that such possibilities generate, it is important to realize that technology is only at the nascent stage of a robotic revolution at sea. Indeed, just as the first navy planes started out in the auxiliary role and soon found a place in practically every operational and tactical task at sea, so too do we note a similar expansion of combat roles with unmanned systems. A more critical issue is that despite the relentless advancement of robotics and its application to combat disciplines, there are no signs that technology will end the central role of the man at sea any time soon. The specifics of the human role may be altered; just as most navy warplanes today don’t have tail gunners, air engineers, signallers or navigators; but  the demand on human skills remains crucial for planning, control, forecasting and technology application.

 Future Strategic Fleet Air Arm Force Structuring: A Conclusion

The ultimate reality of the international system is the place that power, enjoys in the scheme of assuring stability in relations between nations. Uncertainty in international relations queers the pitch, in view of the expanded space of possibles. In an earlier section we had noted the quintessential link between strategic policy and the framing of a theory for force structuring.  But as austerity and inflation continue to bite into the defence budget and make more complex the four operational dilemmas as symbolised by the race between technology and operational concepts; the balance between mass and precision; transparency of the battle space demanding doctrinal integrity and the growing ascendancy of offensive power, we may accept that the rationale for maritime air power remains sound. But the planner must bite the bullet when it comes to the generation of an operationally judicious mix of robotic capabilities along with manned aircraft to provide optimal operational orientation; if it means the coming of smaller, more numerous UAV Carriers supported by shore based long range unmanned patrol air crafts, then the planner must embrace this future.   

Download full article here.


End Notes

[i] Hiranandani GM. Transition to Triumph, NHQ New Delhi and Lancer New Delhi 2000, Pg 4-6.

[ii] Ibid, Pg 3.

[iii]  Monograph by author titled Strategic Posture in the Eastern Ocean: The Incoherent Shoals. United Service Institution of India New Delhi 2011, P7.

[iv] Transition to Triumph, Pg 262.

[v] Jane’s Fighting Ships 1939. London Samson Low, Marson & Co Ltd Naval Publishers. Pgs 38-42, 183, 315, 489.

[vi] Jane’s Fighting Ships 1943-4. Pgs 35-36, 457.

[vii] In 1948 the Scindia shipyard, later nationalised in 1961 as the Hindustan Shipyard Ltd., post independence built India’s first indigenous cargo ship the Jal Usha displacing 8000 tons.

[viii] Transition to Triumph, Pg 262.

[ix] Singer Peter, W. Washington Post, Opinion 06 December 2011.

The Paradox of Power: The Case for an Integrated Response Doctrine to Counter Cross Border Insurgency

 by

Vice Admiral (retd) Vijay Shankar

This commentary was first published on the Institute for Peace and Conflict Studies (IPCS) website in September 2013.

Keywords: Cross-border incursions, Proportional response, “Strategy of a Thousand Cuts,” Terrorism as an Instrument of State Policy, “focoism,” Indo-Pak border surveillance

Abstract:

It is no accident that Pakistan has learnt to exploit our traditional mode of politico-military analysis and response to border incursions. Apologists within India make a slanted argument that the problem of Pakistan sponsored insurgency is essentially political and  attacks on the Indian armed forces are more an effort to break the political process by provoking armed conflict, forgetting that it is the very institution that sponsors cross border insurgency that also controls the political process. Tragically inaction or inadequacy of response, as experience has shown, will cause the worst escalation. 

The Inadequacy of Proportional Response

The Pakistan army has relentlessly pursued its Politico-Military-Militant strategy of a “thousand cuts” to keep the Indian state of Jammu and Kashmir on the boil and in consequence erode the will to federate. While success in this endeavour has been denied Pakistan, it has, for reasons not quite convincing, kept the response from the Indian side proportional, reactive and tactically restrained. This, Pakistan has achieved despite the fact of sponsoring the primary provocation. Ironically the balance of power is so heavily skewed towards India that it is a paradox that the “cuts” persist varying only in terms of gore.

Given the context and nature of the strategy that relies on bleeding India through the use of irregulars; the low risk, low cost and high return (to the Pakistan cause) of the stratagem and the enduring security predicament that it precipitates leaves the planner in a state of disquiet. In dealing with contrivance of this brand, leadership often makes flawed strategic choices because they are “misled by common sense”[1]. Attempting to restrict action through a one sided belief in the inviolability of the border or Line of Control (LoC) or defend it through a combination of diplomacy, economics and proportional reaction leaves the antagonist to decide where, when and how to inflict the fated forthcoming ‘cut’. Also, the sense of proportionality is hollow and often inconsequential since purpose and value are so distinctly in variance.

The Perpetual Imbalance

Normally in dealing with a conservative nation, strategic objectives do not present an existential peril and interests are governed by rationality, then a comprehensive strategy consists of sustained political, economic and diplomatic engagement backed by a military posture that supports the strategy. However, Pakistan is no normal conservative state; and, as Imtiaz Gul, the Pakistani journalist and author, has with so much distress emphasized “the perpetual imbalances in the civilian military equation continues to distort the political landscape.” The Army’s obsessive rivalry against India provides the reason for supremacy in affairs of state and the promotion of terrorism as an instrument of state policy. [2]

The dialectic of an asymmetric conflict is unique in that it is not just one of opposing wills, but, on the weaker side, of radical ideology and brutality in the application of force with protracted low level violence against civilian targets being the preferred tool. In these circumstances to restrain response from taking castigatory action is to effectively deny physical censure, concede the legitimacy of the assault and to invite the next ‘cut’. India’s counterinsurgency efforts in, not just Kashmir, but across India are not unlike the Latin American response to “focoism” [3] earnest, naïve, aggressive and impatient without an effective three pronged doctrine to challenge ideological inspiration, deter and punish the sponsor while at the same time eliminate the terrorist perpetrator. It must therefore come as no surprise that low intensity of conflict has endured in Kashmir for quarter of a century.

The Case for Escalation

Contemporary conditions in Kashmir are appropriate to enable the three pronged doctrine mainly because the ideological stimulant of an identity in religious terms rather than national is today, jaded. At origin, in the late 1980s when Pakistan’s strategy to equip, train and launch the indigenous Kashmiri militants began, the insurrection had a home brewed basis; today the fighters have been supplanted by itinerant and rootless Jihadists. These aliens neither share the ideology nor the beliefs of the Kashmiri. This single consideration must be taken advantage of vigorously through education and economic stimulants and is being done with some success, since the lure of Pakistan is hardly attractive, it’s politics lies in militant and sectarian tatters, it’s economic prospects uninviting and its fundamental beliefs exposed and universally objectionable. So much so that the prospects of an Indian political solution in Kashmir never seemed more bright while Pakistan’s involvement, never more vulnerable. However the problem lies not in the politics of that State but in the fractious control that the army exercises in the affairs of that nation.

It is no accident that Pakistan has learnt to exploit our traditional mode of politico military analysis and response to border incursions. Apologists within India make a slanted argument that the problem of Pakistan sponsored insurgency is essentially political and the attacks on the Indian armed forces are more an effort to break the political process by provoking armed conflict; forgetting that it is the very institution that sponsors cross border insurgency that also controls the political process. It is nobody’s case that military success must precede the political process for, indeed, the two are inseparable; however it is equally clear that political reconciliation cannot co-exist when strategies that seek to bleed are at play. The aim of the Response Doctrine is to bring about the ambience for a political process by raising the strategic cost (militarily, economically and diplomatically) to Pakistan of its maverick policies. Such being the case, the Indian military response must be so tuned as to introduce an escalatory factor that deepens the intensity of  response and enlarges the dimension of operations that in a calibrated manner emphasises the conventional weight that it carries and consequently deters intrusions.

As the function of military power in international politics undergoes fundamental change on account of its disproportionate growth in relation to most of the objectives in dispute,[4] so must the doctrines that drive it. There is often confusion in the establishment when instinctive conservatism controls the usage of an armed force dedicated to the principles of unlimited war fought by massive forces. Obviously such forces combating insurgents will result in poor efficiency of engagement. Under these conditions to persistently reason that escalation will invoke the philosophical abstraction of the Clausewitzian extreme is to deny an essential tool of state craft; that is, to develop integrated force response doctrines and reorganise specially equipped and trained personnel for the task of retaining focus, impact and precision of response.

Framework for Riposte

The Indian Army has absorbed and consolidated considerable experience in counter insurgency operations based on combating insurrection in the Punjab and the North Eastern states. But the nature of these operations was different since the dominant consideration was that you were dealing with your own citizenry and not foreign sponsored and trained elements being used as an instrument of an adversarial State’s policy. However the lessons of the past were that success against irregular forces depends on first class surveillance and intelligence; on effective coordination of political, administrative and military resources and training of local constabulary. These lessons remain true in countering the “strategy of a thousand cuts” with a distinctness introduced by the fact that the insurgents are in the main aliens, their sponsors a nation inimical to India and they operate from outside the territories of India.

This at once suggests a layered frame work for the riposte, it begins with the creation and enabling of an ‘Intelligence Region’ that concentrates its effort along the border, Actual Ground Position Line (AGPL) and LoC to a depth that covers launch pads, training areas, logistic and financial support and cover posts; this network is to be supported by national technical resources and global intelligence complex both national and international. The second layer is the ‘Surveillance and Tracking Area’ which extends from the border or LoC fencing and AGPL extending radially outward across the border and the LoC up to probable launch pads and cover posts, this Zone is to be under electronic and optical surveillance continually by airborne scouts, unmanned aerial vehicles and ground based cross spectrum means all operating from the Indian side of the frontier. The business layer is the ‘Kill Zone’ which starts at the LoC/border and extends inward to the fence and a little beyond which may be deemed to extend to a depth of three to five kilometres within which integrated force by air and land must rapidly be brought to bear. Beyond this Zone within the country, it will be left to ground forces to interdict the intruding insurgents. Coordination between the three layers must be swift and precise. Time in ‘Kill Zone’ will be short, between five to fifteen minutes demanding near immediate acquisition and brisk neutralization of targets. Engagements in this layer will be characterized by integration of forces, decisive command and control, speed and lethality.

Contours of a Response Doctrine: Conclusion

In framing a Response Doctrine the primary linkage is between executive actions on the frontier with the authority that has delegated these powers (the Cabinet Committee on Security, CCS, in India) to the Operational Commander. The doctrine must be guided by a set of principles governing armed action when two or more Services and other cooperating agencies are operating together in order to ensure impact and effectiveness of command in joint response operations. This body of response precepts is predetermined and established by the CCS. The doctrine must articulate guidance, directives, procedures, information flow and define command responsibilities in the three layered zones (mentioned earlier) and relationship within these zones for the conduct of integrated response operations. It must also address material issues earmarking forces available to the Commander including counter insurgency aircrafts, UAVs and Special Forces describing operational concepts and accomplishment of support tasks. Of essence to the response scheme and to assure doctrinaire credibility is time sensitivity of actions. To this end the agglomerate of operational/tactical knowledge will need be put into pre planned contingency matrices generating integrated execution plans in the ‘Surveillance and Tracking Area’ and the ‘Kill Zone’.

Devising its response, India has the entire spectrum of conventional and technical choices to deter cross border insurgency and bear down on the intruder; this is the only advantage that the victim enjoys. The resolve with which such a doctrine is enabled is the real challenge for it paves the way to political resolution. Tragically inaction or inadequacy of response, as Kargil, the Parliament assault and 26/11 have shown, will cause the worst escalation.

 


End Notes

[1] Shy, John.  Jomini, Makers of Modern Strategy P 168. Edited by Peter Paret Princeton University Press, 1986.

[2] Gul, Imtiaz. The Most Dangerous Place, Viking Penguin 2009, P 181, 183.

[3] Custers, Peter Dr. The Legacy of Che Guevara: Internationalism Today Sri Lanka Guardian, February 24, 2010. The central of principle Focoism  is that militancy and terrorist acts by cadres of small, fast-moving paramilitary groups can provide a focus (in Spanish, foco) for popular discontent against a sitting regime, and thereby lead a general insurrection.

[4] Kissinger, Henry A. American Strategic Doctrine and Diplomacy, The Theory and Practice of War,  P 276. Edited by Michael Howard, Indiana Unversity Press 1965/1975.