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Showing posts with the label pacification

How France Lost Algeria But Developed a New Kind of Social War

“Peterson situates the  Algerian War  not as a tragic aberration or a final spasm of colonial violence, but as a formative moment in global military thinking . “The doctrines that emerged from Algeria did not end with the  French defeat  in 1962.  They travelled outward, shaping how western militaries understood insurgency, stability, and governance across the Cold War world and beyond.”
Jeff Halper "lays out the case for Israel’s centrality to the system of transnational economic hegemony by following up his initial question with a section entitled, “The Global Pacification Industry,” which explores capitalism’s accumulative process, alongside the changing nature of global conflict. As state to state engagement involving tanks and conventional armed forces has receded, Halper argues it has been replaced by the increasingly important role of what he terms “securocratic wars,” located in the “global battlespace,” which aim at nothing less than the pacification of the world-wide population to which his title refers." War Against the People See also My interview with Jeff Halper (2008)