Guerrilla War Sparknotes

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Guerrilla warfare can be found in Moa Tse-Tong book On Guerrilla Ware. In his book, he describes guerrilla warfare as one of various techniques used by troubled people to combat aggression. Moa splits guerrilla warfare into three parts.1. Organization, consolidation and preservation of base areas, usually in difficult and isolated terrain (Tse-Tung) . The purpose is to develop support for the overthrow of the existing government, or to go against an occupying force. The resistance does not get involved in direct military action against the enemy, but harasses the enemy through espionage, harm, or civil unrest. 2. Progressive expansion by terror and attacks on isolated enemy units to obtain arms, supplies and political support (Tse-Tung) . …show more content…

Decision, or destruction of the enemy in battle” (would begin when some of the guerrilla forces have obtained superiority over the enemy and are transformed into conventional fighting forces; only in this phase can the enemy be defeated (Tse-Tung) . When looking at how the West fought wars, which was a fast and decisive battle to decide the outcome of a war, and the guerrilla tactics of Mao Tse-tung which focus on the continuation of war and the avoidance of any military decision. This explains the reasons why tactics such as hit and run, fight and live to fight for another day are being used by guerrillas around the world. The guerilla can afford to run when they are not able to go head to head with a standing strong army and disappear and hide back into the population when it is not safe. "A guerrilla", according to Mao Tse-tung (1937), "can always sink back into the peaceful population which is the sea in which the guerrilla swims like a fish" . The space for time formula is well conceived but the importance of time is that it has to be used to produce a political result which translates into the raising of a revolutionary consciousness or the will of the people. In fact, the population is the key to the entire

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