• The Idea
  • Alanbrooke
  • Clausewitz
  • Galula
  • Grant
  • Mao
  • Thucydides
  • Turing

Kings of War

Posts tagged as:

peacekeeping

Counterinsurgency and its Discontents: Part 2

by David Ucko on 18 April 2011 · 11 comments

Peacebuilding and Counterinsurgency: Two Sides of the Same Coin?

by David Ucko on 18 December 2010 · 8 comments

Dealing with Retrenchment

by David Ucko on 20 July 2010 · 10 comments

  • About

    This is a blog by various faculty and research students of the Department of War Studies, King's College London.
  • Contributors

    David Betz, The Faceless Bureaucrat, Kenneth Payne, Thomas Rid, Rob Dover, David Ucko, Captain Hyphen, Francis Grice, Jack McDonald, and Clement Guitton.
  • We’re reading

  • Recent Comments

    • Jack McDonald on Raffaello Pantucci on targeted killings: what are the alternatives?
    • Quintin on Raffaello Pantucci on targeted killings: what are the alternatives?
    • Raff on Raffaello Pantucci on targeted killings: what are the alternatives?
    • Charles on Obama, Realist to Little People.
    • PhilG on Lessons Learned – a plug
    • Quintin on Raffaello Pantucci on targeted killings: what are the alternatives?
    • Gunrunner on Raffaello Pantucci on targeted killings: what are the alternatives?
    • Gunrunner on Raffaello Pantucci on targeted killings: what are the alternatives?
    • Leading the World (?) « The Rosemont Report on Should the UK’s cyber protection be centralised?
    • Leading the World (?) « The Rosemont Report on Should the UK’s cyber protection be centralised?
    • Madhu on Lessons Learned – a plug
    • Madhu on Dropped the SOPA? Be careful when you bend over…
  • Blogroll

    (Random selection)

    • OxBlog
    • Early Warning
    • Defense and the National Interest
    • Abu Muqawama
    • Attackerman
    • Swedish Meatballs Confidential
    • On Violence
    • Manoeuvre in Maritime Asia
    • Monkwire
    • Small Wars Journal
  • Archives

  • Banner

    Francesco Goya’s Still Life, "Three Salmon Steaks" (Oskar Reinhardt Collection, Winterthur). The painting is notable for its unconventional -- at least at the time -- use of pitch black, as well as for its unexpected yet highly effective treatment of violence.


  • Click for further information
  • Follow @kingsofwar
  • Subscribe via RSS Subscribe via Facebook
  • Our books

Get smart with the Thesis WordPress Theme from DIYthemes.

WordPress Admin