Note I have a Argentinean edition published in
2005, but from what I've seen on line is that
in other International editions the book is called "The White Flag Principal:
How to lose a war (and why)
Shimon
Tzabar 2005
Author:Shimon Tzabar, the author himself is probably one of the most interesting aspects of this book, it's
to take a peak into the writers past, which is explained in first person in the prologue of this book, Shimon writes that he was born in Tel Aviv in 1926, that he was a member of a couple Jewish military organization/terrorist groups Stern Gang, Etzel and Hagana fighting the British occupation up to the Second world war ( the book actually uses the word terrorist groups to describe the organization Shimon took part of). he fought in Israel's First three wars and immigrated to Great Britain where he landed a job as a librarian in the British Museum and also he became a journalist over time.
to take a peak into the writers past, which is explained in first person in the prologue of this book, Shimon writes that he was born in Tel Aviv in 1926, that he was a member of a couple Jewish military organization/terrorist groups Stern Gang, Etzel and Hagana fighting the British occupation up to the Second world war ( the book actually uses the word terrorist groups to describe the organization Shimon took part of). he fought in Israel's First three wars and immigrated to Great Britain where he landed a job as a librarian in the British Museum and also he became a journalist over time.
Some core
ideas of the Book: (Everything in this
book is pretty debatable):
So here
we go with this curious book: How to
lose a war, and why this is a good Idea, which author sustains the idea that the
loser in a war tends to be better off than the victor, that ends up bogged down
by their post war responsibilities, now
the example of the Iraq war, the one
George W Bush started, popped in my head, which invalidates most of this book if you sit down
to analyze it in detail using the core arguments of this book, even though this
book is a interesting read and at
moments it's pretty fun, theoretically
this book goes nowhere.
The book
presupposes the actors in conflict are mostly States that have territories, or
that conflict revolves around the possession of land, and that a war has only two
sides that are in conflict, but for example the Syrian civil war that has been raging on since the early
days of the Arab spring, and that has been internationalizing even since, at
least has 4 or 5 sides confronting each other.
The
author affirms that there is only one constant in war that an actor can be absolutely
control, giving up and capitulating, which very interesting concept, victory
depends on defeat of the but not the other way around, defeat generates rights
and obligations for the winner in a conflict, but with one observation from my
behalf only if they choose to follow international law, but the actor can possibly for religious reasons (for example) is hell
bent annihilate you, so capitulating isn't an
option.
The writer
establishes two types of enemies, the ones you
have shared frontiers with and
the enemies that we do not share
a frontiers with. Book only establishes that States can only have enemies that
are other States, or with some interpretation international actors that are aspiring to be States, so groups like Al Qaeda cannot fit in the concept
that Shimon is trying to build.
Tzabar establishes that most effective means to create
any enemy is to use territorial reclamation against another State,( I must
explain in a important level
absurdity the book recommends that a head of State must find an enemy in
the first place, so you can get defeated so good fortune can follow). But I
must recognize that territorial spats can be effective, Russia make a good use
of this strategy, but terrorism is probably the most effective method to make an enemy pretty quick. There are three ways to reclaim a territory, for the
author, legally (through historic documents), emotional reclamation through
speeches and accidently, but the author seems to have forgotten the most effective
way of gaining an enemy direct occupation of its territory.
The Bad:
Authors
establishes countries like Japan and Germany are better off since their defeat pretty
much ignoring the historical context when this happened, ignoring the
tremendous human cost these countries suffer and caused during and after the
wars , and omitting that there was a
strong political will from the central western counties the help these
countries from allying themselves with the USSR. Another example the Afghanistan,
explaining that the country is better off since the fall of the Taliban, but
this isn't the best example, it has been 14 years since the US invasion, and
the Taliban are still fighting to take over the country. Georgia lost a short
war against Russia in 2008 loosing part of its territory and up till today this
small country is in a pretty complicated situation.
Now using
the logic you need a enemy to lose a war, enemies tend to unite population of a
State, producing a period where the peoples will be strong, united and with high moral, in this book this
is a bad thing, so the head of State must generate internal strife to make sure
to lose the war. The author offers a few examples that a head of State can do
like adopt a official religion and impose it on every one or just let immigrants
in, and the way the author presents this point is so political incorrect that I
can't believe it especial being the fact the author is a immigrated that moved
from Israel to Great Britain.
From page
63 to page 145 (the end of the book), there isn't anything very relevant, nothing
goes in the direction of proving the Shimon's affirmation that losing a
conflict is better than winning, even though there are a couple of historical anecdotes
the are pretty fun to read.
Book somewhat
confusing at moments you do not understand if the author is talking seriously
or he's being ironic, maybe there are translation issue with this book I have a edition in Spanish, but most of this
book just doesn't make sense.
Establishes
a hypothesis that is never answered in the book, actual there is no conclusion.
Overall
Rating: 5 out of 10
Guys read
this book and give me your opinions