Evaluating Sunni participation in an election in a representative Iraqi town

What we once thought of as purely civilian considerations are today increasingly significant matters to international peace and security. Conflicts within states and urban encounters make civilian considerations particularly troublesome for military forces sent to stabilize that country. Along with...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Gun, Suat Kursat
Other Authors: Sanchez, Susan M.
Format: Others
Published: Monterey California. Naval Postgraduate School 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10945/2035
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spelling ndltd-nps.edu-oai-calhoun.nps.edu-10945-20352017-05-24T16:07:27Z Evaluating Sunni participation in an election in a representative Iraqi town Gun, Suat Kursat Sanchez, Susan M. Guttieri, Karen Naval Postgraduate School Computer programs Terrorism Ethnic groups Virtual reality What we once thought of as purely civilian considerations are today increasingly significant matters to international peace and security. Conflicts within states and urban encounters make civilian considerations particularly troublesome for military forces sent to stabilize that country. Along with these changes in the patterns of war, the techniques that are used in operations have also changed. Stability operations are an application of military power to influence the political and civilian environment. Often these take the specific form of peacekeeping or peace support operations. Peace Support Operations (PSO) are military operations to support, provide and sustain a long-term political settlement. PSO and conventional war have different characteristics. It is possible to generalize the main purpose of conventional war as "defeat the enemy," whereas peacekeeping attempts to "win the peace." At tactical level, some of the goals of peacekeeping missions are to help and protect civilians, to avoid violence and escalation, and to ensure the safety of the public with civilians in a stability operation than in combat. Secondly, stability operations are executed in a more diverse range of environments than those of conventional war. Furthermore, depending upon the mandate, soldiers must use different sets of engagement rules when interacting with civilians. 2012-03-14T17:33:54Z 2012-03-14T17:33:54Z 2005-09 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10945/2035 62165121 Approved for public release, distribution unlimited xvi, 109 p. : col. ill. 1 col. map ; application/pdf Monterey California. Naval Postgraduate School
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Computer programs
Terrorism
Ethnic groups
Virtual reality
spellingShingle Computer programs
Terrorism
Ethnic groups
Virtual reality
Gun, Suat Kursat
Evaluating Sunni participation in an election in a representative Iraqi town
description What we once thought of as purely civilian considerations are today increasingly significant matters to international peace and security. Conflicts within states and urban encounters make civilian considerations particularly troublesome for military forces sent to stabilize that country. Along with these changes in the patterns of war, the techniques that are used in operations have also changed. Stability operations are an application of military power to influence the political and civilian environment. Often these take the specific form of peacekeeping or peace support operations. Peace Support Operations (PSO) are military operations to support, provide and sustain a long-term political settlement. PSO and conventional war have different characteristics. It is possible to generalize the main purpose of conventional war as "defeat the enemy," whereas peacekeeping attempts to "win the peace." At tactical level, some of the goals of peacekeeping missions are to help and protect civilians, to avoid violence and escalation, and to ensure the safety of the public with civilians in a stability operation than in combat. Secondly, stability operations are executed in a more diverse range of environments than those of conventional war. Furthermore, depending upon the mandate, soldiers must use different sets of engagement rules when interacting with civilians.
author2 Sanchez, Susan M.
author_facet Sanchez, Susan M.
Gun, Suat Kursat
author Gun, Suat Kursat
author_sort Gun, Suat Kursat
title Evaluating Sunni participation in an election in a representative Iraqi town
title_short Evaluating Sunni participation in an election in a representative Iraqi town
title_full Evaluating Sunni participation in an election in a representative Iraqi town
title_fullStr Evaluating Sunni participation in an election in a representative Iraqi town
title_full_unstemmed Evaluating Sunni participation in an election in a representative Iraqi town
title_sort evaluating sunni participation in an election in a representative iraqi town
publisher Monterey California. Naval Postgraduate School
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10945/2035
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