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Military Maladaptation: Counterinsurgency and the Politics of Failure
Authors:Kristen A. Harkness  Michael Hunzeker
Affiliation:1. School of International Relations, University of St Andrews, Scotland, UK;2. Woodrow Wilson School, Princeton University, New Jersey, USA
Abstract:Tactical learning is critical to battlefield success, especially in a counterinsurgency. This article tests the existing model of military adaption against a ‘most-likely’ case: the British Army’s counterinsurgency in the Southern Cameroons (1960–61). Despite meeting all preconditions thought to enable adaptation – decentralization, leadership turnover, supportive leadership, poor organizational memory, feedback loops, and a clear threat – the British still failed to adapt. Archival evidence suggests politicians subverted bottom-up adaptation, because winning came at too high a price in terms of Britain’s broader strategic imperatives. Our finding identifies an important gap in the extant adaptation literature: it ignores politics.
Keywords:Military Adaptation  Wartime Learning  Organizational Change  Counterinsurgency  Tactics  British Army  Post-colonial Africa  Clausewitz
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