Robert Taber’s The War of the Flea (1965) argues that guerrilla forces, acting as a "flea" to the state "dog," can defeat superior armies by focusing on political, rather than military, victory. The text posits that by surviving and utilizing psychological warfare to exhaust the enemy's political will, insurgents turn the population against the state, making the struggle untenable for conventional forces. The work highlights that in unconventional warfare, the side with superior endurance and popular support ultimately prevails.

Innovative rotor configurations, sleek cockpit designs, and formidable thrust! These are just a handful of features that define the helicopters in Airport CEO, a new type of...
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Unique engine placements, see through nose cones and raw power! Those are just a few of the components that summarize the eastern aircraft, birds rarely seen flying in the west...
Read moreRobert Taber’s The War of the Flea (1965) argues that guerrilla forces, acting as a "flea" to the state "dog," can defeat superior armies by focusing on political, rather than military, victory. The text posits that by surviving and utilizing psychological warfare to exhaust the enemy's political will, insurgents turn the population against the state, making the struggle untenable for conventional forces. The work highlights that in unconventional warfare, the side with superior endurance and popular support ultimately prevails.