RECOMMENDED READINGThe nice thing about falling behind on this feature is that good material builds up. Hoo-HA!
Thomas P.M. Barnett - "
Managing China's Ascent"
Books are intellectual "
auctoritas". The blog is fun. Syndication is nice but op-eds in a few print outlets -
The New York Times,
The Washington Post,
Time,
Newsweek and
U.S. News & World Report - are the big time influencers with the old line establishment. Nice work Tom!
Dan of tdaxp - "
Dreaming 5GW"
I was certain that
Boyd 2007 would spark a new series out of Dan; here he will delve into the intuitive conflict of fifth generation warfare.
Fabius Maximus - "
America takes another step towards the “Long War”Part I"
Fabius draws a contrast with the start of the Cold War to question some of the operative premises of the GWOT. There is also a sustained critique of the COIN philosophy of
LTC. David Kilcullen.1 Raindrop - "
William Gibson Thinks You Should Go to Metricon"
Gunnar is one of those guys who deserves to have me link to him more often than I do, a true expert in IT security as well as a Gibson fan ( seems to be a common thread among
Zenpundit readers; I am halfway through
Neuromancer, my first Gibson read)
Daniel Nexon - "
Toward a neo-neo-Reaganite foreign policy "
Dr. Nexon, much in demand for Harry Potter interviews these days, critiques
Donald Kagan's grasp of grand strategy, giving both praise and criticism. I like the term "neo-neo-Reganite" too - something to be said for reviving the most effective aspects of Reagan foreign policy.
:O)William Lind - "
How to Win in Iraq"
A number of readers, including
Morgan, have urged that I read Lind's piece. As someone who grew up reading
Ayn Rand, Russell Kirk, Albert Jay Nock, and
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, it's weird for me to see a genuine paleoconservative like Bill Lind enunciating a grand strategy of conserving the state. Yet the global environment has changed and the Burkean roots of conservatism are finding political traction, at least in some quarters.
PARAMETERS -"
A Social Network Approach to Understanding an Insurgency " by
Brian ReedParticularly appropriate paradigm for tribal societies where networks come " hard wired" by genetics as well as by social, political and economic choices.
That's it!
Labels: recommended reading