The Counterinsurgency Reading List
Abu Muqawama and Charlie put our heads together across the Atlantic Ocean and came up with this, the long-awaited Counterinsurgency Reading List. This list is not exhaustive, but the "essentials" and "intermediate" lists include all the books and articles the two of us think you should read. There's also some fiction and films -- and even a section on political Islam because while it doesn't necessarily have anything to do with COIN, it certainly has relevance to the operating environments in which some of our readership live and work. Click on the links, and they should -- with a few exceptions -- either take you to the article or to the link on amazon.com.
Wan to know what we think about specific books and articles? Check out our COIN Book Club entries, which review select offerings from this Reading List.
Counterinsurgency Reading List
October 2007
(updated November 2007)
(updated March 2008)
(updated May 2009)
The Bare Bones Essentials
David Galula, Counterinsurgency Warfare: Theory and Practice
David Kilcullen, "28 Articles", Military Review, May-June 2006
Kalev Sepp, "Best and Worst Practices in COIN", Military Review, May-June 2005
Intermediate Reading
Colonial Era
Robert Bateman, "Lawrence and his Message"
C.E. Callwell, Small Wars
John Cann, Counterinsurgency in Africa: The Portuguese Way of War 1961-1974
Carl von Clausewitz, On War
Bernard Fall, The Street without Joy
David Galula, Pacification in Algeria: 1956-1958
Tony Geraghty, The Irish War
Charles Gwynn, Imperial Policing
Alistair Horne, A Savage War of Peace: Algeria 1954-1962
Frank Kitson, Gangs and Counter-Gangs
Robert Komer, Bureaucracy Does its Thing
Andrew Krepinevich, The Army and Vietnam
John Nagl, Learning to Eat Soup with a Knife: Counterinsurgency Lessons from Malaya and Vietnam
Neil Sheehan, A Bright Shining Lie
Robert Taber, War of the Flea
Robert Thompson, Defeating Communist Insurgency
Roger Trinquier, Modern Warfare
Mao Tse-Tung, On Guerrilla Warfare
Bing West, The Village
Modern Day
Ralph Baker, "The Decisive Weapon", Military Review, May-June 2006
David Barno, “Fighting ‘The Other War’: Counterinsurgency in Afghanistan, 2003-2005,” Military Review, September-October 2007
Stephen Biddle, “Seeing Baghdad, Thinking Saigon,” Foreign Affairs, March-April 2006
Burgoyne & Marckwardt, The Defense of Jisr al-Doreaa
Peter Chiarelli, "Winning the Peace", Military Review, July-August 2005
Nigel Alwyn Foster, "Changing the Army for COIN Operations", Military Review, November-December 2005
Les Grau, The Bear Went Over the Mountain
T.X. Hammes, The Sling and the Stone: On War in the 21st Century
T.X. Hammes, “Fourth Generation Evolves, Fifth Emerges,” Military Review, May-June 2007
Hecker & Rid, War 2.0: Irregular Warfare in the Information Age
Chris Hickey, "Principles and Priorities for Training in Iraq", Military Review, March-April 2007
Frank Hoffman, "Hybrid Threats"
David Kilcullen, The Accidental Guerrilla
David Kilcullen, "Anatomy of a Tribal Revolt"
David Kilcullen, “Counterinsurgency Redux,” Survival, Winter, 2006
John Kizley, "Learning About Counterinsurgency", Military Review, March-April 2007
Sean MacFarland and Niel Smith, "Anbar Awakens," Military Review, March-April 2008
Marston & Malkasian, Counterinsurgency in Modern Warfare
H.R. McMaster, “On War: Lessons to be Learned.” Survival, February-March 2008
Steven Metz, Rethinking Insurgency
Elizabeth Rubin, "Battle Company Is Out There"
Rupert Smith, The Utility of Force
Various, FM 3-24, "Counterinsurgency"
Advanced Reading
Hannah Arendt, On Revolution
Hannah Arendt, On Violence
Robert Asprey, War in the Shadows
Robert Bates, Prosperity and Violence
Jarret M. Brachman and William F. McCants, "Stealing Al-Qaeda's Playbook," CTC Report, February 2006
Scott A. Cuomo and Brian J. Donlon, "Training a 'Hybrid' Warrior," Marine Corps Gazette
Loup Francart, Maitriser la violence
Robert M. Gates, "Beyond Guns and Steel: Reviving the Nonmilitary Instruments of American Power"
Antonio Giustozzi, Koran, Kalashnikov, and the Laptop: The Neo Taliban Insurgency in Afghanistan
John Bagot Glubb, War in the Desert
Daniel Helmer, "Flipside of the COIN: Israel’s Lebanese Incursion Between 1982-2000"
Stathis Kalyvas, The Logic of Violence in Civil Wars
Alan B. Krueger, What Makes a Terrorist
Mark Lichbach, The Rebel’s Dilemma
Yezid Sayigh, Armed Struggle and the Search for State: The Palestinian National Movement, 1949-1993
James Scott, Moral Economy of the Peasant
Frederic M. Wehrey, “A Clash of Wills: Hizballah’s Psychological Campaign Against Israel in South Lebanon.”
Jeremy Weinstein, Inside Rebellion: Politics of Insurgent Violence
Fiction
Graham Greene, The Quiet American
Rudyard Kipling, Kim
Jean Larteguy, The Centurions
Leon Uris, Trinity
Films
The Battle of Algiers
Go Tell The Spartans
The Wind that Shakes the Barley
64 comments:
Hmm, some I've read, many I haven't. Thanks for the suggestions.
One that you don't have on there is Marc Sageman's Understanding Terror Networks — I guess it's more counter-terrorism than counter-insurgency (with some backgrounder information on political Islamic revivalism thrown in as well), but it could still be valuable for understanding how insurgent networks form. He's got a new book coming out in December too, it looks like.
you can use this for Mao's On Guerrilla Warfare instead.
You need these, I think:
Euclides da Cunha, Rebellion in the Backlands.
Thomas Pakenham, The Boer War.
J. Bowyer Bell, Terror out of Zion.
Yehuda Bauer, From Diplomacy to Resistance Jewish Palestine 1939-1945.
R. D. Wilson, Cordon and search,: With 6th Airborne Division in Palestine.
Really, if you are going to do insurgency, you have to do the Zionist groups. And what about the British in Afghanistan, or Gordon in Sudan, or Custer, stuff like that? Nuts and bolts of the arrogance of western theorists. Da Cunha's book is excellent in this regard. Pakenham too.
And in the modern vein Charles Glass on Hizbullah, such as this for instance:
http://www.lrb.co.uk/v28/n16/glas01_.html
They did after all stop the IDF cold last summer. Some significance for the future, one would think.
And replace Uris (Uris?? Jesus!) with this:
http://www.pastpeak.com/archives/2007/07/unicef_catastro.htm
More nuts and bolts, kind of stuff.
On political Islam, the best single work I've ever read is Olivier Roy's Globalized Islam (originally named something else, in French). Its main preoccupation may be Muslim life in Europe, but the approach he takes is valid to most of the radicalization/alienation phenomenon he describes, whether in Morocco or Marseilles. (No COIN connection, though.)
Two works I've recently read that I most strongly commend:
--Mary Habeck, Knowing the Enemy: Jihadist Ideology and the War on Terror
--John Robb, Brave New War: The Next Stage of Terrorism and the End of Globalization
Neither are insurgency per se, but it's impossible to understand contemporary insurgency outside its wider context. And both of these are seminal works in this broader context.
I'm curious if your omission of Bard O'Neil was intentional.
I am hopeful that these amazon links go to support your (and Charlie's) blogging efforts? I would much rather use an amazon link that gives a portion of profits to you guys.
Thanks for the christmas list, by the way.
These are fantastic comments and recommendations. Keep it up!
A few things:
1. We included the fiction section because we think it compliments the non-fiction narratives. Larteguy's 'The Centurions' makes a good companion piece to both Fall on Indochina and Horne on Algeria. And Uris' 'Trinity' -- recommended to me by a retired British intelligence officer with two tours of duty in Northern Ireland -- does the same, I think, for Geraghty and Tim Pat Coogan's books on Ireland. I really liked 'Trinity' myself but have never read anything else Uris wrote.
2. The political Islam section is thin, I admit, and the only reason I didn't include Roy's much-recommended book is because, embarrassingly, I have yet to read it.
3. No, Charlie and I don't think reading about the Zionists is absolutely necessary for understanding COIN. But helpful? Hell yeah. Thanks for the great recommendations, G Hazeltine.
4. Yes, Aaron, if you click on the amazon links, Charlie and I get a small cut. So you can support the blog by buying straight from the links.
5. Bard O'Neill's book is sitting next to me on the bookshelf, so no, don't read too much into its exclusion. Or any other book for that matter. This is not, as we said, an exhaustive list. Just a start for all you counterinsurgents out there.
The Village by Bing West.
A first-hand account of the Marine's Combined Action Program in Vietnam. Well written and well worth the read.
Wow, great list. After I finish my thesis I may have to read some. I posted about it on my blog The Revolution Script. Keep up the good work!
Since you have the film Go Tell the Spartans on the list I think you should add the book on which it was based: Incident at Muc Wa by Daniel Ford
http://www.amazon.com/Incident-at-Muc-Daniel-Ford/dp/0595089275
I think it is a great book. Dan is still a student of war (currently doing an MA in the War Studies Department at King's College London which is how I know him).
I would also suggest that you have a future of war/sci-fi section in which I would put Bruce Sterling's Distraction and Neal Stephenson's Diamond Age or Snow Crash. I second Antonius Block's rercommendation of Robb's Brave New War. The Sterling and Stephenson novels give a quite good picture of what the world would be like in 20-50 years should Robb's ideas be correct. Actually I would go so far as to say that whereas ten-fifteen years ago Starship Troopers and Ender's Game were cropping up on commandant's reading lists people should be reading Stephenson now for the same reasons.
A further thought. Others have pitched Habeck's Knowing the Enemy and Roy's Globalized Islam which I agree are very worthwhile. And you already have Gilles Kepel's Jihad... on your list. I would suggest Kepel's War for Muslim Minds (2006) instead.
Really good suggestions, David. I have not read The War for Muslim Minds -- just Jihad -- so that explains that omission.
Also, several readers have suggested 'The Village.' Both Dave at SWJ and Phil Carter over at Intel-Dump mentioned this book, and Phil is correct in saying we should have included 'A Bright Shining Lie' as well:
http://www.intel-dump.com/archives/archive_2007_10_28-2007_11_03.shtml#1193694619
Another popular recommendation (that I can't believe I omitted) is Robert Asprey's encyclopedic "War in the Shadows." Great resource on nearly all modern insurgencies and guerrilla campaigns.
A more academic rec is Jeremy Weinstein's "Inside Rebellion: The Politics of Insurgent Violence."
I also 2nd the Packenham nomination. His book on the Boer War is a great coda to his broader volume: "The Scramble for Africa: White Man's Conquest of the Dark Continent from 1876-1912."
(And my omission of Bard O'Neill is somewhat more intentional than AM's.)
Good shots. From Spain, in Spanish, a current commentary regarding your "The Counterinsurgency Reading List". I suggest in it the review of the 1965's French-Spanish movie "La 317éme Section" regarding the times of Dien Bien Phu.
Best
http://laharkadeaspizua.blogspot.com/2007/10/dia-de-memoria-viva-dia-de-lectura-y.html
There's an argument that T.E. Lawrence should be on the list. Personally, I think Taber's "War of the Flea" is heavily overrated.
Perhaps more provocative, I'd argue that the following should be on the list:
M.L.R. Smith - Guerillas in the Mist: Reassessing Strategy and Low Intensity Warfare (Review of International Studies, Vol.29, no.1 2003)
Will you be updating this reading list at the same web address, i.e. http://abumuqawama.blogspot.com/2007/10/great-counterinsurgency-reading-list.html ??
I ask because I'd like to permalink it to our website.
Thanks
-HSAT
www.headspaceandtiming.com
Any good recommendations for COIN PSYOP?
I’m re-reading Douglas Valentine’s, “The Phoenix Program.” There is some good insight on the workings of the bureaucratic mess that crippled Viet Nam. However, I'm not too sure about the agenda of the author.
If you can find it, I would recommend Phillip Davidson, Vietnam at War. He was the MAC J-2 and if you can forgive the self-serving portions of his book (much as you must forgive Fall his Francophilia in Hell in a Very Small Place) it offers a useful discussion of how the North Vietnamese used psyop / media operations to break the U.S. will to continue fighting.
I'd recommend, as a sort of 'beginning' book on COIN, the pair of Pournelle Sci-Fi novels Go tell the Spartans and Prince of Sparta. In essence, they outline a lot of the basic concepts of fighting a counterinsurgency with a well-paced and satisfying plot. I understand they were rolled into a compilation volume titled The Prince:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Prince_%28Pournelle%29
Forgive me if this seems too basic, but for those who don't understand warfare at all, starting with COIN is a bit much. So, let's reach into the way back machine, and find:
Sun Tzu, The Art of War. There's a reason this is considered a basic, must read book. Almost anything written by anyone else later is a refinement of the general principles laid out here.
Niccolo Machiavelli, The Prince. If you haven't read this one, shame on you. The sort of cutthroat politics laid out in this book are an integral part of many extremist movements, and give a better understanding of the broader themes of insurgencies, why they do what they do, etc.
On the tactical level, I would recommend Hackworth’s Steel My Soldiers Hearts. Not totally about counterinsurgency, but a great read to give to the LTs.
A broad overview of America’s Sisyphean effort in COIN can be found in A.J. Birtle's U.S. Army Counterinsurgency And Contingency Operations Doctrine, 1860-1941. and U.S. Army Counterinsurgency And Contingency Operations Doctrine, 1942-1976. The Savage Wars Of Peace: Small Wars and the Rise Of American Power by Max Boot is easier to read and accomplishes the same thing, but lacks the depth of Birtle.
An excellent short read that covers tactical, operational, and strategic aspects of COIN is Roger Trinquier’s Modern Warfare: A French View of Counterinsurgency.
Last, check out RAND’s On "Other War”: Lessons from Five Decades of RAND Counterinsurgency Research.
If you wish to understand Political Islam, you should go to source - Said Qutb, start with Milestones.
This is also a good read if you can find a copy
http://www.antiqbook.de/boox/aub/342264.shtml
Hi, Only one commenter mentioned this so I will recommend 7 Pillars of Wisdom by T.E. Lawrence. I think the whole book is worthwhile because it deals with the whole set of cultural, pyschological and moral issues of people from one culture "embedding" with an other to fight a brutal war. If you don't have time to read the whole thing then read the chapter where Lawrence is lying sick in his tent and formulating his strategy by comparing the Turks need to have a high density of troops to space to control territory versus the Arabs advancement of the revolt by means of advancing an idea...which cannot be stopped by a blockhouse. This is the single best chapter on insurgency written in english. Watch the movie because it is a great movie.
Hi again, didn't see this on the list: Ride With Devil directed by Ang Lee. It is the story of the Missouri Bushwackers on the Confederate side. It is very good at showing the complex social and cultural arrangements that lead people to join an insurgency and that support the ongoing insurgency. And also how the insurgency ends. It does this in a context that Americans can relate to and understand.
I also recommend the entire series of "The Wire". It shows how criminal enterprises operate, almost invisible to the larger society. How they organize, how the negotiate, how they organize their territory, how they recruit new members, how they put their strategies into operation. They are very much like insurgencies or vice versa.
Charlie,
Why don't you tell us what we all want to know and do a post on Bruce Bueno de Mesquita and the outer reaches of Game Theory? I think it would be only fair...
Consider the firsthand observations of COIN from infantry elements of the German Army and Waffen SS, fighting partisans during the Second World War:
The Forgotten Soldier by Guy Sajer
The Black March by Peter Neumann
Yeah.......I've seen two of the three films........
Thanks for adding to my never-ending reading list. I will never catch up. You have made me feel more inadequate than ever.
A late addition to the already lengthy list: John Hersey's "A Bell for Adano."
curious as to how kim by kipling is on the list? i read it while at airborne and found it to be more about kim trying to find enlightenment with the espionage thrown in. of course i am just an uneducated airman and may have missed something.
Since you include a few novels, and also the splendid Burt Lancaster flick Go Tell the Spartans, you might add Incident at Muc Wa. That's the story upon which the movie was based, and a very fine story it is, if I do say so myself. Blue skies! -- Dan Ford
Resistance and Control in Pakistan
by Akbar S. Ahmed
was a very interesting read on the NWFP of Pakistan from the perspective of a Pakistani PA who served there.
I'm curious to know if you have read and have an opinion on
Inside the Jihad: My Life with Al Qaeda
by Omar Nasiri
Outstanding work. I was just starting to build a reading list/bibliography on counterinsurgency (for my research on COIN in New Spain) and this list, along with other works suggested in various comments, gives me a great start. Thanks for compiling the list!
To provide clear and comprehensive insight on today's outstanding COIN issue, whither the American Way of War in the wars of the 21st century, I suggest adding to the top, must read, category Colin S. Gray's March 2006 SSI
monograph IRREGULAR ENEMIES AND THE ESSENCE OF STRATEGY: CAN THE AMERICAN WAY OF WAR ADAPT? In a nod to the First Rule of Manageable Lists, "If you add something you must take something out," move Kalev Sepp's article or Dave Kilcullen's (sorry Kalev and Dave) down one level. both are essentially tactical and TX and Gray are strategic: in war the strategic always trumps the tactical (ask the Germans).
LTCOL Terence J. Daly
Whoops. In my recent comment I forget to include TX Hammes, THE SLING AND THE STONE to be moved up to "Bare Bones" status. TX tells us what is coming and with Colin Gray, Galula and Sir Robert Thompson are the Four Evangelists of War in the 21st Century.
LTCOL Terence J. Daly USAR
How about Les Grau's followup, "The Other Side of the Mountain?" I've found it quite useful to read things from the other side, so to speak.
And if you're going to have a section on politicized Islam, why not include "The Failure of Political Islam" by Olivier Roy?
Traded emails with General Kitson and he said he is not interested in republishing Gangs and Countergangs at this time. says he has plenty of copies. not sure why, as i publish "low intensity operations", but it is his book. i will keep you posted.
Jamie
Hailer Publishing
Did you omit Martin van Creveld by design? "Transformation of War" won't be a revelation to a serious student or (hopefully) experienced soldier, but reading it as a junior officer on my first Afghanistan tour was invaluable. I'd also nominate "The Rise and Decline of the State." I haven't managed to read "The Changing Face of War" yet, but I'd be curious to know if anyone has, and what they thought of it.
Keep up the great work, guys. Us knuckle dragging grunts appreciate it.
Afghansti by Peter Kosminsky was on TV last night. It would be worth adding to the film list. Documentary on the Soviet soldiers experience of Afghanistan follwoing their withdrawal. Not cheering, but often instructive (e.g., "after every operation, more people opposed us").
I would also suggest the original Marine CORPS "Small Wars Manual". Still available...
Has there been any British reviews of the new Field Manual 3-24? I'd be interested in British Army comment on it.
Colin Robinson
NZ doctoral student
Defence College of Management & Technology
I haven't managed to read "The Changing buy tramadol online Face of War" yet, but I'd be curious to know if anyone has, and what they buy tramadol online thought of it.
An excellent buy tramadol short read that covers tactical, operational, and strategic aspects of COIN is Roger Trinquier’s buy tramadol Modern Warfare: A French View of Counterinsurgency.
Any thoughts on "Terrorist Recognition Handbook", by Malcolm Nance?
On "modern day" you really need Arreguin-Toft's "How the Weak Win Wars: A Theory of Asymmetric Conflict" (it's a journal article--2001--and a book--2005. On "colonial era," you should add T.E. Lawrence's Seven Pillars of Wisdom (a long read, but a good one, with both cultural and strategic relevance to the subject at hand).
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I note that somebody suggested "The Forgotten Soldier" by Guy Sajer (spelling?) I hate to say it people but it's a work of fiction!
I would reccoment "Low Intensity Operations" by Frank Kitson. History of the Rhodesian SAS by Barbara Cole (her husband an ex brit Para was in the unit) Selous Scouts, Top secret war (I forget the author, published in UK by Galago pub- incredible story of counter gangs operations in Rhodesia. "Big boys games" about the covert war in Northen Ireland, The Operators by Rene again about covert int gathering in NI- superb read and even better than that "The Fishermen" about the unit that targeted and recruited IRA informers in NI.
On Afghanistan I would reccomend "The other side of the mountain" also by Grau- this is about Mudj tactics against the Sovs. Also Rashid- "Taliban, oil and the new great game in central asia."
"The Osama Bin Laden I knew" by Peter Bergan- Peter is one of the few people to have interviewed OBL and this book is a collection of interviews of people who knoew him all his life.
And finally (phew, I hear you say!!)The Siege of Mecca- which is a superb read.
(I'm one of the instructors on the team that teaches the USMC ATO Level II course)
Very nice article. Thanks!
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Hi! Good article.
Great Article! Thank You!
Notice that David Galula's book is also on the Marine Corps reading list.
Check out Robert Pape's book "Dying to Win: The strategic logic of suicide terrorism"
an interesting theory as to why suicide bombing happens and for what ends it happens.
I would also add, "Ten Ways to Lose at Counterinsurgency" by Kathy Greenhill and Paul Staniland. This is featured in the December 2007 issue of Civil Wars Journal.
This piece takes a critical look at COIN theory/doctrine, and would be useful for soldiers and scholars alike.
While this may not be COIN-specific, I would recommend Discourses of Global Politics: A Critical (Re)Introduction to International Relations by Jim George. This is the best overview of International Relations theory available and will arm any counter-insurgent with a better understanding of the global political environment they work in.
Another great book... Says much of what Kilcullen says, but in a different way.
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Development-Security-Unending-Mark-Duffield/dp/0745635806/ref=pd_sim_b_1
I was surprised to find this blog after so many years. Great list above. 4 Absolute "must reads" that aren't included:
1. The Other Side of the Mountain by Lester Grau and Ahmed Jalali
2. Al-Qaeda By Jason Burke
3.Imperial Hubris by Anonymous
4. The Sling and the Stone: On War in the 21st Century by USMC, Colonel Thomas X. Hammes
You should consider some books from the US Civil War - especially re: Missouri and the war in Appalachia. The best book on guerrilla war is Michael Fellman's "Inside War." Not only does it deal with the psychology of surviving a guerrilla war, but it highlights the beginning of modern US counter-insurgency policy on Francis Lieber. The Lieber Code became one of the foundational documents behind the Geneva Conventions.
Another good book on the US Civil War - in Appalachia - is "Victims" by Philip Shaw Paludan. It covers the Shelton Laurel Massacre in far Western North Carolina. Think of it as a sort of true story behind Cold Mountain.
I was reading through your list and I noticed that Col. Edward Lansdale's In the Midst of Wars: An American's Mission to Southeast Asia. was not pn your list even though several countries still require their counterinsurgency forces to read it as part of their training.
Someone asked about "Inside the Jihad: My Life with Al Qaeda"
by Omar Nasiri. I've read it and found it a good insight into the pre-9-11 world of jihad. It is the supposedly true story of a European muslim who becomes a spy and goes to the Al Queda training camps in Afghanistan prior to September 11. It describes in great detail how the camps worked and what was taught. The author later infiltrated some mosques in London that were recruiting jihadists and raising money for jihad. Some of the stories seem a little over the top, but might very well be true. A good look into the adventures of an international jihadist and how such jihadists come to exist. The only COIN value might be in understanding how the terror networks work and then using that knowledge to disrupt them.
Someone needs to reissue Larteguy's novels, The Centurians and The Praetorians, in a single volume.
And then someone needs to reissue Kitson's Gangs and Counter-Gangs.
A scholarly introduction updating each would be nice.
These three books are absurdly rare, given the current demand for them.
While not strictly books on counterinsurgency, could I suggest the Occupation of Iraq by Mr. Ali A. Allawi and Descent into Chaos by Mr. Ahmed Rashid?
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