Notes
1 Ruike Xu and Wyn Rees, ‘Comparing the Anglo-American and Israeli-American Special Relationships in the Obama Era: An Alliance Persistence Perspective’, Journal of Strategic Studies 41/4 (June 2018).
2 Mark Erbel and Christopher Kinsey, ‘Think Again: Reappraising Military Logistics and Its Centrality to Strategy and War’, Journal of Strategic Studies 41/4 (June 2018).
3 Stephen Tankel, ‘Beyond the Double Game: Lessons from Pakistan’s Approach to Islamist Insurgency’, Journal of Strategic Studies 41/4 (June 2018).
4 C. Christine Fair, ‘Insights from a Database of Lashkar-e-Taiba and Hizb-ul-Mujahideen Militants’, Journal of Strategic Studies 37/2 (April 2014), 259–90; Kersti Landsdotter, ‘Regional Support for Afghan Insurgents: Challenges for Counterinsurgency Theory and Doctrine’, Journal of Strategic Studies 37/1 (February 2014), 135–62.
5 Thomas P. Cavanna, ‘Geopolitics over Proliferation: The Origins of the Grand Strategy and the Implications for the Spread of Nuclear Weapons in South Asia’, Journal of Strategic Studies 41/4 (June 2018).
6 Evan Braden Montgomery and Eric S. Edelman, ‘Rethinking Stability in South Asia: India, Pakistan, and the Competition for Escalation Dominance’, Journal of Strategic Studies 38/1–2 (February 2015), 159–82.
7 Emil Aslan Souleimanov, ‘Making Jihad or Making Money? Understanding the Transformation of Dagestan’s Jamaats into Organized Crime Groups’, Journal of Strategic Studies 41/4 (June 2018).
8 James Cockayne, ‘The Futility of Force? Strategic Lessons for Dealing with Unconventional Armed Groups from the UN’s War on Haiti’s Gangs’, Journal of Strategic Studies 37/5 (October 2014), 736–69; Eric A. Souleimanov and Husayn Aliyev, ‘Asymmetry of Values, Indigenous Forces, and Incumbent Success in Counterinsurgency: Evidence from Chechnya’, Journal of Strategic Studies 38/5 (August 2015), 678–703.