Alec Worsnop
@aworsnop.bsky.social
78 followers 28 following 18 posts
Assistant Professor at UMD School of Public Policy. I study military power and civil-military relations, mainly in insurgent groups. www.alecworsnop.com
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Reposted by Alec Worsnop
risabrooks12.bsky.social
It's easy to see this speech as just weirdly performative, but there's a lot more—and a lot worse—going on here.

The meeting & speeches are part of a larger project aimed at promoting the military leadership’s partisan alignment with the administration.

How? 1/
atrupar.com
Hegseth: "If the words I'm speaking today are making your heart sink, they you should do the honorable thing and resign."
Reposted by Alec Worsnop
rpg-volley.bsky.social
👋 Kent State grad here with 26+ years in the Guard and Reserve.
jamellebouie.net
i also frankly think a lot of you would do well to actually talk to anyone who serves in the guard or who is active duty military, because it's clear to me that these people are mostly an abstraction for you
aworsnop.bsky.social
It draws on my forthcoming book, Rebels in the Field. In an interview with me, a US SF officer put this research in context: ‘I just don’t understand our military’s baseline assumption that insurgents aren’t “real” forces who train and fight well, despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary’
aworsnop.bsky.social
To fight this way, I argue that insurgents, like any other military actor, need capable small units that can fire and maneuver without suffering extensive losses. This requires skilled and committed small-unit combat leaders who plan operations, train fighters, and generate task-based cohesion
aworsnop.bsky.social
I have a new publication out in the Journal of Strategic Studies. It observes that while many have identified the strategic benefits of guerrilla warfare, there is much less understanding of why some organizations have the military capacity to implement these strategies and others do not.
Rebels fire and maneuver too: How small-unit combat leaders sustain guerrilla warfare
Guerrilla warfare is perhaps the most iconic strategy that less powerful insurgents have employed to defeat, or at least stymie, much stronger fighting forces. While many have identified the strate...
www.tandfonline.com
aworsnop.bsky.social
Interestingly, these leadership changes were inadvertently aided by the US decapitation campaign, which removed many leaders who opposed reform.
aworsnop.bsky.social
It was only after the Taliban introduced a cadre of small-unit combat leaders, which they referred to as nizami massuleen, that their ability to fight began a to improve.
aworsnop.bsky.social
Illustratively, the Taliban’s long-standing social, political, and ideological foundations created resistance to tactical adaptation and improvements in military training and preparation.
aworsnop.bsky.social
This means that the social, material, and political endowments that insurgents can draw upon do not result in meaningful combat power on their own. It is what insurgents do with what they have that matters.
aworsnop.bsky.social
And military cadres are central to how rebels can benefit from weapons, sanctuary, or external support. Military cadres plan operations, generate force through training, and create task-based cohesion, uniting fighters around shared expectations of competence and trust.
aworsnop.bsky.social
Cadres represent a missing link needed to activate many processes identified in the study of civil war. For example, political cadres are a central factor in explaining when processes such as political education, indoctrination, and discipline work.
aworsnop.bsky.social
Without any type of cadres, the theory explains how some organizations can only employ simple (though still meaningful) forms of military power. But, to fight with more complex forms of military power, I argue that a cadre is fundamental.
aworsnop.bsky.social
To explain variation in military power, I propose the "cadre theory" - which argues military power is a function of how rebels forge connections. Small-unit leaders, I argue, create the strongest connections.
aworsnop.bsky.social
Drawing on evidence from the Taliban after 2001 and 17 organizations in Iraq (2003-present) and Vietnam (1945-1975), the book develops a novel spectrum of what insurgents actually do on the battlefield.
aworsnop.bsky.social
The book is motivated by the puzzle of how the Taliban turned from a broken organization to an effective military force. More broadly, how should we describe variation in insurgent military power? Why can some insurgents deploy these various forms of power on the battlefield while others can't?
aworsnop.bsky.social
I'm excited to share that my book, Rebels in the Field, will be coming out with Oxford University Press this summer. The book focuses on the military processes involved in deploying force in substate conflicts.
Reposted by Alec Worsnop
profjessblankshain.bsky.social
Risa is a preeminent scholar of U.S. and comparative civil-military relations. As a rule, if she takes the time to write it, I take the time to read it. #civmilsky
risabrooks12.bsky.social
In this article, I talk about a new “bargain” the Pentagon’s civilian leadership is imposing on the U.S. military.

Here’s why we should all be worried about it. 🧵
1/

www.foreignaffairs.com/united-state...
The Dangerous New Civil-Military Bargain
Trump’s demands for loyalty will weaken the U.S. armed forces.
www.foreignaffairs.com
Reposted by Alec Worsnop
jpclark97.bsky.social
This is a great resource for aspiring military writers. The Harding Project and Army University Press put together a top-notch product. It was a pleasure to make a small contribution that reviews the earliest US Army professional journals. Check it out!
www.armyupress.army.mil/Journals/Mil...
www.armyupress.army.mil
Reposted by Alec Worsnop
heidiurben.bsky.social
Excited to share the latest from me, @risabrooks12.bsky.social, and @eclipticevader.bsky.social in TNSR which centers on a novel survey of retired flag officers and features a framework to assess the state of the norm against retired officer political activism. (1/2)

tnsr.org/2023/11/spea...
aworsnop.bsky.social
Totally agree. It's a notable challenge to sort this out, but it's meaningful. The article mostly discusses the role of political integration in shaping the military, but there are plenty of insurgent examples (eg, the LTTE), where the military embeds cadre in the political wing to establish control
aworsnop.bsky.social
@profmusgrave.bsky.social could I be added to the Polisky list? Thank you!
aworsnop.bsky.social
I do think that when the political and military leadership is separated, in this case in different countries, it can shape the power dynamics of insurgent civ-mil -- often strengthening military leaders. @judah-grunstein.bsky.social, happy to send the AFS article, I'm at [email protected] CivMilSky