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    Guerrilla warfare

    noun

    • 1. engagement in or the activities involved in a war fought by small groups of irregular soldiers against typically larger regular forces: "in the 1960s a broad shift occurred from rural guerrilla warfare to urban terror"

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  2. The meaning of GUERRILLA WARFARE is irregular military actions (such as harassment and sabotage) carried out by small usually independent forces.

  3. Guerrilla, member of an irregular military force fighting small-scale, limited actions, in concert with an overall political-military strategy, against conventional military forces. Guerrilla tactics involve constantly shifting attack operations and include the use of sabotage and terrorism.

  4. noun. the use of hit-and-run tactics by small, mobile groups of irregular forces operating in territory controlled by a hostile, regular force. guerrilla warfare. Wars fought with hit-and-run tactics by small groups against an invader or against an established government. ( See counterinsurgency .)

  5. Jun 3, 2013 · Characterized by ambushes, surprise raids, and irregular styles of combat, this guerrilla war became savage, chaotic, and often disorganized. The guerrilla war, as waged by both Confederate guerrillas and Unionists in the South, gathered in intensity between 1861 and 1865 and had a profound impact on the outcome of the war.

  6. Strategy and tactics. Mao Zedong addressing a group of his followers in 1944. The broad strategy underlying successful guerrilla warfare is that of protracted harassment accomplished by extremely subtle, flexible tactics designed to wear down the enemy.

  7. Guerrilla warfare (also spelled guerilla) is a method of combat by which a smaller group of combatants attempts to use its mobility to defeat a larger, and consequently less mobile, army. It is typical that a smaller guerrilla army will either use its defensive status to draw its opponent into terrain which is better suited to the former or ...

  8. The history of guerrilla warfare stretches back to ancient history. While guerrilla tactics can be viewed as a natural continuation of prehistoric warfare, the Chinese general and strategist Sun Tzu, in his The Art of War (6th century BCE), was the earliest to propose the use of guerrilla warfare.

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