New article: ‘Hybrid, ambiguous, and non-linear? How new is Russia’s ‘new way of war’?’

Just a quick note, that an article of mine has appeared in the latest issue of Small Wars & Insurgencies, vol. 27, no. 2, a special issue on ‘Proxy Actors, Militias and Irregular Forces: The New Frontier of War?’ pulled together by Alex Marshall of Glasgow University. It emerged from an excellent workshop that Alex convened last year on this important and under-researched topic and the issue includes, along with all sorts of first-rate material, the always-great Vanda Felbab-Brown on Afghan militias and an interesting conceptual piece by Robert and Pamela Ligouri Bunker. My contribution, Hybrid, ambiguous, and non-linear? How new is Russia’s ‘new way of war’?, places recent Russian practice very firmly within an historical tradition going back to pre-Soviet adventures. Here’s the abstract:

Russia’s recent operations in Ukraine, especially the integrated use of militias,

gangsters, information operations, intelligence, and special forces, have created

a concern in the West about a ‘new way of war’, sometimes described as ‘hybrid’.

However, not only are many of the tactics used familiar from Western operations,

they also have their roots in Soviet and pre-Soviet Russian practice. They are

distinctive in terms of the degree to which they are willing to give primacy to

‘non-kinetic’ means, the scale of integration of non-state actors, and tight linkage

between political and military command structures. However, this is all largely a

question of degree rather than true qualitative novelty. Instead, what is new is

the contemporary political, military, technological, and social context in which

new wars are being fought.