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Full Description
To succeed in achieving its national security objectives the United States needs to use Associative Power in place of both Hard Power and Soft Power. Associative Power is the use of joint ventures and alliances to optimize the forms of power brought to bear in conflicts responding with precision to a spectrum of enemy threats, situational challenges, and political opportunities. Associative Power was wisely and successfully used by the United States in the Vietnam War through the CORDS program of counter insurgency and village development to defeat the Viet Cong insurgency and permit the withdrawal of American combat forces. Associative power was not used by the United States—nor was the best counter insurgency practices of CORDS—in the Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts. As a result of this omission, interim outcomes in Iraq and Afghanistan did not acceptably accomplish American objectives.
Contents
Forward: Associative Power and American National Security, John R. Allen
Introductory Thoughts: Associative Power and Strategic National Intelligence Capabilities, David Durenberger
Preface, Stephen B. Young
Chapter One: ASSOCIATIVE POWER: Holding the Center
Chapter Two: The Origins of CORDS
Chapter Three: Vietnamese Nationalism
Chapter Four: Getting the Right Context in Place
Chapter Five: CORDS Gets Its Opportunity
Chapter Six: CORDS Version 1.0
Chapter Seven: The South Vietnamese Nationalists Save Their Country: Phase 1—1969
Chapter Eight: The South Vietnamese Nationalists Save Their Country: Phase 2—1970/1971
Chapter Nine: CORDS Version 2.0—1971 Pacification and Development Plan
Chapter Ten: South Vietnam Holds Off an Onslaught
Chapter Eleven: A Vietnamese Village
Chapter Twelve: Iraq: An Episode of Amateur (and Feckless) Colonial Pretension
Chapter Thirteen: Afghanistan: A Kabul-Centric Quagmire
Chapter Fourteen: Securing the American Future through Associative Power
Afterword: A Perso



