Report / In Depth

Twenty-First Century Proxy Warfare: Confronting Strategic Innovation in a Multipolar World

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Abstract

This research paper is the product of a joint New America and ASU Center on the Future of War initiative.

New America, as part of its partnership with Arizona State University, has embarked on a multiyear research project on twenty-first century proxy warfare. This report is the first in a series on conflicts in the Greater Middle East and its periphery that will be published as part of the project. This study highlights research gaps and reconceptualizes proxy warfare as a strategy that relies on third-party armed forces that lie outside the constitutional order of rival states engaged overtly or covertly in armed conflict. The analysis draws on a broad review of the existing literature and conversations with more than three dozen policymakers, researchers, and practitioners from July to October 2018. The analysis is also informed by discussions during a workshop on the subject of proxy warfare held by New America in coordination with Arizona State University and the Omran Center for Strategic Studies in Istanbul, Turkey, featuring more than 35 journalists, analysts, and former policymakers.

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Acknowledgments

The authors would like to thank Peter Bergen and Daniel Rothenberg, co-directors of the New America/Arizona State University Future of War project for their support throughout the production of this paper. We are also grateful to David Kilcullen, Walter Ladwig, and Vanda Felbab-Brown for providing expert peer review and suggestions on how to sharpen our analysis. New America Senior Advisor Sharon Burke, ASU/New America Future of War Fellow Joshua Geltzer, New America Cybersecurity Initiative Co-Director Ian Wallace, and COL Dennis Wille, U.S. Army Fellow based at New America, provided additional thoughtful insights, advice and cautions. Dozens of others, who cannot all be named here, helped workshop the paper and its findings or spoke to us regarding the subjects addressed here. The Omran Center for Strategic Studies partnered with New America to hold the workshop in Istanbul, Turkey that informed much of this paper.

Thanks are also owed to New America Policy Analyst Melissa Salyk-Virk, Program Assistant Catherine York, and interns Wesley Jeffries and Ian Wallace as well as ASU researcher Sumaita Malk, for their support in researching and editing the paper. Loren Riesenfeld and Ellie Budzinski crafted the informative graphics that convey the complexity of the subject while Joanne Zalatoris and Maria Elkin laid out the paper and website. Thanks to Sabrina Detlef for her deft copyedit. This paper was supported in part by a grant from the Carnegie Corporation of New York.

This paper would not be what it is without the extensive advice and help of so many people. All errors of fact or interpretation are, of course, the authors' alone.

More About the Authors

Candace Rondeaux
DSC_4051 - CR CHOICE
Candace Rondeaux

Senior Director, Future Frontlines and Planetary Politics; Professor of Practice, Arizona State University

Twenty-First Century Proxy Warfare: Confronting Strategic Innovation in a Multipolar World

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