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General Paper

When do armed revolts succeed: lessons from Lanchester theory

, &
Pages 1363-1373 | Received 01 Aug 2011, Accepted 01 Oct 2011, Published online: 21 Dec 2017
 

Abstract

Major revolts have recently erupted in parts of the Middle East with substantial international repercussions. Predicting, coping with and winning those revolts have become a grave problem for many regimes and for world powers. We propose a new model of such revolts that describes their evolution by building on the classic Lanchester theory of combat. The model accounts for the split in the population between those loyal to the regime and those favouring the rebels. We show that, contrary to classical Lanchesterian insights regarding traditional force-on-force engagements, the outcome of a revolt is independent of the initial force sizes; it only depends on the fraction of the population supporting each side and their combat effectiveness. The model's predictions are consistent with the situations currently observed in Afghanistan, Libya and Syria (September 2011), and it points to how those situations might evolve.

Notes

1 Technically, we assume that at the start of the dynamics both forces have some presence in a friendly territory, ie SB0>0 and CR0>0. Otherwise, one of the forces is never challenged and wins trivially. Also, the model has a fourth equilibrium that corresponds to the case where the territory is divided between Blue and Red who control only hostile territory (SR+CB=1). Obviously, such a situation is very unlikely and indeed this equilibrium is unstable, as shown in the Appendix.

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