Sabtu, 22 November 2008

Guerrila Warfare

Hai .entah kenapa saya dok fikir pasal guerrilla warfare ni..yang dok ajar l pasal Guerrilla Warfare lecturer UITM namanya Dr Arshad but l dok panggil dia Pak Chad coz dalam BTN memang panggilan Pak ni biasa..nasib yg pompuan depa tak panggil Mak cik...ish2 rasa tua la pulak..heheeh
CUba ingat balik citer2 zaman kanak2..camner si kancil ngalahkan Pak Belang dan macamana kura-kura menang dengan Arnab..macam tulah lebih kurang konsep Guerrilla Warfare ni...
Sekarang dalam teori persaingan ramai yg kecil mengalahkan si giant...kalau kita tengok dlm kehidupan.....nak cakap pun segan...driver pun boleh kidnap isteri majkan dia...ish2 itu baru contoh.....apa-apaun moral of the story sekecil mana pun kita ..tak mustahil raksaksa pun boleh kita kalahkan...so yg penting usaha terus usaha dan yg penting...akal mesti pinterrrrrrrrrr...
tapi l ni pandai cakap jer...sendir nyer hal pun ,,,,semut pun tak berani nak pijak..belum lagi gajahhh...kesiannnnnn..ehheheh

kat sini l ada copy paste pasal konsep ni..lets read...


The term 'guerrilla' originates from the actions of small bands of Spanish soldiers who fought against Napolean's French army in the Peninsular War (1807-1814). The word 'guerrilla' is Spanish for "little war".
The tactics employed by "guerrillas" date back to the ideas of Sun Tzu, the Chinese military strategist who lived over 2000 years ago. Sun Tzu argued that all warfare involves the employing of one's strength to exploit the weakness of the enemy. In his book, The Art of War, Sun Tzu gives several suggestions on how to defeat an enemy that is larger and better equipped than your own army.
Sun Tzu's ideas were successfully adapted by Mao Zedong, the leader of the communist forces in China. The establishment of a communist government in China was an inspiration to all revolutionaries in South East Asia. This was especially true of China's neighbour, Vietnam.
The strategy and tactics of the National Liberation Front were very much based on those used by Mao Zedong in China. The NLF was organised into small groups of between three to ten soldiers. These groups were called cells. These cells worked together but the knowledge they had of each other was kept to the bare minimum. Therefore, when a guerrilla was captured and tortured, his confessions did not do too much damage to the NLF.
The initial objective of the NLF was to gain the support of the peasants living in the rural areas. According to Mao Zedong, the peasants were the sea in which the guerrillas needed to swim: "without the constant and active support of the peasants... failure is inevitable."

2 ulasan:

jon pour do care berkata...

Eh ! Kenapa ni asyik dok cakap pasal perang aje ni ! Art of war la...Guerila warefare la...! Ala, relax la mem sahab ! Make love not war !

Let's shower a lot of love into this world so that it would be a better place to live for all of us.

Tanpa Nama berkata...

hehehhe....tak tau lah ..maybe tengah berperang dengan diri sendiri...