Notes
1 See, for example, Stephen Tankel, ‘Beyond the Double Game: Lessons from Pakistan’s Approach to Islamist Militancy’, The Journal of Strategic Studies (2018).
2 See, for example, Jon R. Lindsay, ‘Reinventing the Revolution: Technological Visions, Counterinsurgent Criticism, and the Rise of Special Operations’, The Journal of Strategic Studies 36/3 (2013), 422–53.
3 On coercion, see Robert A. Pape, Jr., ‘Coercion and Military Strategy: Why Denial Works and Punishment Doesn’t’, The Journal of Strategic Studies 15/4 (1992), 423–75.
4 On regime insecurity, see Narushige Michishita, ‘Coercing to Reconcile: North Korea’s Response to US “hegemony”’, The Journal of Strategic Studies 29/6 (2006), 1015–40; and Jeffrey W. Knopf, ‘Varieties of Assurance’, The Journal of Strategic Studies 35/3 (2012), 375–99.
5 Recent work on grand strategy includes Jacqueline L. Hazelton, ‘Drone Strikes and Grand Strategy: Toward a Political Understanding of the Uses of Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Attacks in US Security Policy’, The Journal of Strategic Studies 40/1–2 (2017), 68–91; and Michael Clarke and Anthony Ricketts, ‘Did Obama Have a Grand Strategy?’ The Journal of Strategic Studies 40/1–2 (2017), 295–324.