Asymmetric Warfare – Not every war has to end?

Journal Title: Security and Defence Quarterly - Year 2016, Vol 11, Issue 2

Abstract

The study of warfare, throughout its history, as well as efforts to legally regulate the resort to war and the conduct of war, were concentrated exclusively on one form of warfare - interstate conflict. Only since the terrorist attacks on Washington and New York in 2001 and the following ‘Global War on Terrorism’ has a discussion on a potentially new kind of warfare - asymmetric warfare - moved into the spotlight. Despite all the scientific attention, the concept of asymmetric warfare remains undefined or ill-defined until today, resulting in a proliferation of its use and limiting its value. Hence, restraint in the use of the term is necessary, in order to reinforce its analytical value and applicability. Defining asymmetric warfare as a conflict among opponents who are so different in their basic features that comparison of their military power is rendered impossible, is such an attempt to limit the term to a substantially new form of warfare, witnessed in a conflict that is often commonly called the Global War on Terrorism. The past two years, since the upsurge of the so-called Islamic State to the forefront of the salafi jihadi movement, have witnessed a significant change in this war. Superficial analysis could lead to the conclusion that the proclamation of the Islamic Caliphate on the territories of Iraq and Syria (for now) seems to have recalibrated this conflict into traditional inter- state war again, making the concept of asymmetric warfare obsolete and diminishing it into just a short-term aberration in the history of warfare. Nothing could be further from the truth. The enemy in the Global War on Terrorism was and remains a global and territorially unrestricted ideological movement whose numbers cannot even be estimated, which fights its battles wherever it chooses to, and whose ultimate goal is the annihilation of the international system of sovereign states, not the creation of a new state within this system. The Islamic Caliphate in its current boundaries is nothing more than the “model Islamic state”, as envisioned by Osama bin Laden in his 1996 fatwa as part of Al Qaeda’s 200 year plan for the establishment of God’s Islamic World Order. This grand strategy is the guiding blueprint of the salafi jihad that is waged against the Westphalian state system in a war that is truly asymmetric. We have to adjust to this strategic asymmetry if we are to prevail in this struggle, fighting a long war against an indefinable enemy on battlefields that are still unknown.

Authors and Affiliations

Zrinko Petener

Keywords

Related Articles

Book review: Tomasz T. Aleksandrowicz, Terroryzm międzynarodowy [International Terrorism], Wydawnictwo Akademickie i Literackie, Warszawa 2015, pp. 198

This article is book review: Tomasz T. Aleksandrowicz, Terroryzm międzynarodowy [International Terrorism], Wydawnictwo Akademickie i Literackie, Warszawa 2015, pp. 198.

Sanitary aviation in post-war Poland – historical outline

The aim of this research paper is to present the history of sanitary aviation in postwar Poland since 1945 up till now. In the course of research the following methods were used: analysis, synthesis, abstraction and gene...

U.S. Grand Strategy Towards Russia 2001-2017

U.S. foreign policy towards Russia is of the utmost importance for the national security of the countries on the NATO eastern flank. Grand strategies are among the analytical concepts for classification and analysis of U...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP705991
  • DOI https://doi.org/10.35467/sdq/105400
  • Views 69
  • Downloads 0

How To Cite

Zrinko Petener (2016). Asymmetric Warfare – Not every war has to end?. Security and Defence Quarterly, 11(2), -. https://europub.co.uk/articles/-A-705991