Notes
1. See also Theo Farrell, ‘Improving in War: Military Adaptation and the British in Helmand Province, Afghanistan, 2006--2009’, Journal of Strategic Studies 33/4 (Aug. 2010), 567--94; Sergio Catignani, ‘“Getting COIN” at the Tactical Level in Afghanistan: Reassessing Counter-Insurgency Adaptation in the British Army,’ Journal of Strategic Studies 35/4 (Aug. 2012), 513--39; and Eitan Shamir, ‘The Long and Winding Road: The US Army Managerial Approach to Command and the Adoption of Mission Command (Aufstragstaktik),’ Journal of Strategic Studies 33/5 (Oct. 2010), 645--72.
2. Dag Henriksen, ‘Deterrence by Default? Israel’s Military Strategy in the 2006 War against Hizballah’, Journal of Strategic Studies 35/1 (Feb. 2012), 95--120; Evan Braden Montgomery and Stacie L. Pettyjohn, ‘Democratization, Instability, and War: Israel’s 2006 Conflicts with Hamas and Hezbollah’, Security Studies, 19/3 (Aug. 2010), 521–54; Niccolò Petrelli, ‘Deterring Insurgents: Culture, Adaptation and the Evolution of Israeli Counterinsurgency, 1987–2005’, Journal of Strategic Studies 36/5 (Oct. 2013), 666--91; Thomas Rid, ‘Deterrence beyond the State: The Israeli Experience’, Contemporary Security Policy 33/1 (2012), 124–47.
3. Sumit Ganguly and R. Harrison Wagner, ‘India and Pakistan: Bargaining in the Shadow of Nuclear War’, Journal of Strategic Studies 27/3 (Sept. 2004), 479--507; Wu Riqiang, ‘Certainty of Uncertainty: Nuclear Strategy with Chinese Characteristics’, Journal of Strategic Studies 36/4 (Aug. 2013), 579--614; Thomas J. Christensen, ‘The Meaning of the Nuclear Evolution: China’s Strategic Modernization and US-China Security Relations’, Journal of Strategic Studies 35/4 (Aug. 2012), 447--87.
4. Tor Bukkvoll, ‘Iron Cannot Fight: The Role of Technology in Current Russian Military Theory’, Journal of Strategic Studies 34/5 (Oct. 2011), 681--706.