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Thread: Looking for historic Rand Counterinsurgency Symposium

  1. #1
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    Default Looking for historic Rand Counterinsurgency Symposium

    In 1960 or '61 Rand conducted a COIN symposium. Galula was one of the participants. Does anyone know where I can find a transcription of the symposium on digits?

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    Moderator Steve Blair's Avatar
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    Look here.
    "On the plains and mountains of the American West, the United States Army had once learned everything there was to learn about hit-and-run tactics and guerrilla warfare."
    T.R. Fehrenbach This Kind of War

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    Much thanks. I didn't think it would be that easy...

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    Default Meeting Lt. Col. David Galula - April 1962

    Meeting Lt. Col. David Galula - April 1962
    by Rufus Phillips, Small Wars Journal Retrospective

    Meeting Lt. Col. David Galula - April 1962 (Full PDF Article)

    In April 1962, I participated in a RAND Symposium on Counterinsurgency held in Washington, D.C, along with my old boss from the 1954–56 days in South Vietnam, General Edward G. Lansdale, and a number of others. Lansdale had been the key advisor to Ramon Magsaysay in the successful campaign against the communist Huks in the Philippines and then in the successful birth of the Republic of South Vietnam in 1954–56. I had worked under him advising the Vietnamese Army in its occupation and pacification of large areas in South Vietnam previously controlled by the communist controlled Vietminh (predecessors to the Vietcong), and I had moved on to Laos to try to help that government counter Pathet Lao subversion in the villages through civic action.

    I did not participate in the first few symposium sessions, but heard from Lansdale that there was a very unusual French officer named David Galula present, who had a lot of good ideas that sounded very much like our own. As I got involved in discussions with Col. Galula, I discovered he wasn’t anything like the vast majority of the French officers I had tried to work with as part of a joint American-French military advisory mission (called TRIM) in the 1954–55 days in Vietnam. Most had a colonial attitude toward the Vietnamese and saw them as lesser beings. Col. Galula, however, was different. He didn’t maintain an attitude of superiority. Rather, his mission involved trying to help the local Algerian population as their friend, and he imbued his troops with that attitude...

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