The Huks

John Robb writes that "The fact is that no major conventional power has ever won a LIC[low intensity conflict] in the last 50 years."

Of the top of my head I remember the Huks. In Philippines in the mid 1940's to mid 1950's the communist Huks were on the verge of controlling the Philippines. The insurrection begun with a combination of the disillusion of the newly freed Filipinos with their new government and power hungry communist gorillas. Two brilliant men, one US, and one Filipino almost "single handily" ended it over several years. [Update: Maybe this does example does not count as a major power war, although the us was supporting the Philippines.wink]

It's a fascinating tale - here's a full book on the Hukbalahap Insurrection.

Update: The "Malay Emergency" was a bloody 13 year "low intensity conflict" won by the British. It pretty soundly counts. smile
Posted by on 10/07 at 06:34 PM

Daniel,

Thanks for the contribution.  However, this wasn’t a test of a major power’s conventional military in a LIC.  It was a pure revolution that was properly contained by an smart political and military leader.

Sincerely,

John Robb

Posted by John Robb  on  10/07  at  08:14 PM

BTW, your format breaks my browser.

Posted by John Robb  on  10/07  at  08:15 PM

I was thinking there was something else as well, and found it. The british in Malaysia. (http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malayan_Emergency)

And thanks for pointing out the formating problems on comments, I was moving things around on the blog today, and messed it up.

Posted by Daniel Von Fange  on  10/07  at  08:23 PM

The brits were dealing with a chinese minority within a population that didn’t support them.  They also told the people that they would leave once order was restored.  Very much the exception.

Posted by John Robb  on  10/07  at  08:50 PM
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