Irregular Warfare Podcast

Winning Without Fighting: Strategic Culture and Gray Zone Competition (Part 1)

13 snips
Aug 8, 2025
Susan Bryant and Thomas X. Hammes dive into the complexities of strategic culture and its impact on irregular warfare. Bryant shares insights on how American beliefs and technological reliance create vulnerabilities in gray zone conflicts. Hammes emphasizes the need for a shift in military strategies, urging a focus on building partnerships over combat. They discuss historical examples from Afghanistan and Iraq, revealing how cultural biases can undermine effective military responses. The conversation highlights the importance of resilience and adaptability in modern conflict.
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INSIGHT

Why They Wrote The Book

  • Susan Bryant and coauthors wrote Winning Without Fighting because no single comprehensive text broke down irregular warfare end-to-end.
  • They created a practical, toolified framework to guide policy across instruments of power.
INSIGHT

Binary Thinking Harms Gray-Zone Competition

  • Susan Bryant argues U.S. strategic culture prefers binaries and views war as an aberration rather than a managed condition.
  • That mindset makes America uncomfortable with gray-zone competition and gives adversaries an advantage.
INSIGHT

Metrics Create An Illusion Of Progress

  • Thomas X. Hammes says the U.S. obsessively quantifies inputs instead of outcomes, creating a false sense of control.
  • That illusion of measurable progress misleads policy and hides real operational failures.
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