The Surrender Paradox: Why Modern Enemies Don’t Quit: The Enemy can’t Organize, Finance, Communicate, Replenish, Govern, Intimidate, or Narrate Violence at Scale. Short of that It is Just not Defeat - Couverture souple

Livre 1 sur 3: Defeat Without Surrender: Designing Lawful Military-Political Strategy Against Unyielding Adversaries

Lomovasky, Dr Israel Carlos

 
9798255977048: The Surrender Paradox: Why Modern Enemies Don’t Quit: The Enemy can’t Organize, Finance, Communicate, Replenish, Govern, Intimidate, or Narrate Violence at Scale. Short of that It is Just not Defeat

Synopsis

Modern war has a problem few leaders want to admit.

Many enemies no longer surrender.

They absorb punishment, lose territory, sacrifice commanders, endure isolation, and still keep fighting. They do not always seek conventional victory. They often seek survival, symbolic endurance, political relevance, narrative advantage, or the strategic exhaustion of the stronger side. That changes everything.

In The Surrender Paradox: Why Modern Enemies Don’t Quit, Dr Israel Carlos Lomovasky examines one of the central strategic failures of the modern era: the persistent belief that military superiority naturally produces political submission. Again and again, states discover that battlefield dominance does not automatically translate into surrender, conflict termination, or durable order. Enemies embedded in civilian environments, organized through ideology, fueled by grievance, shielded by lawfare, and strengthened by media exposure can continue fighting long after classical models of defeat say they should collapse.

This book explains why.

It shows how conventional assumptions about deterrence, escalation, coercion, punishment, and victory often break down against nontraditional adversaries. It explores why some movements treat survival as success, why civilian suffering can be weaponized strategically, why hostage politics and urban density complicate the use of force, and why democracies often find themselves trapped between military necessity and political legitimacy. Most importantly, it asks the question that too many strategic debates avoid: if surrender is not the likely endpoint, what should lawful success look like instead?

Dr Lomovasky offers a rigorous answer. Rather than drifting into either moralistic paralysis or fantasies of unlimited destruction, he develops a lawful military-political framework for confronting enemies that do not intend to quit. The book argues that success in such conflicts depends not only on degrading enemy capabilities, but on redesigning the wider environment in which the enemy survives: governance, legitimacy, civilian dependence, institutional control, coercive signaling, post-conflict sequencing, and the architecture of political order. In this model, war termination is not a single moment of capitulation. It is an engineered process.

Written with clarity, force, and strategic realism, The Surrender Paradox is for readers who want more than slogans about “winning wars” or “ending violence.” It is for military professionals, security thinkers, policymakers, lawyers, scholars, and serious general readers who understand that the hardest conflicts of the modern age are not resolved by firepower alone.

This is a book about the enemies who do not surrender.
It is also a book about the states that keep preparing for a form of victory the enemy has no intention of granting.

And it makes the case that unless democratic states learn how to defeat without expecting surrender, they will continue to fight costly wars with the wrong strategic map.

Les informations fournies dans la section « Synopsis » peuvent faire référence à une autre édition de ce titre.