Irregular Warfare Podcast

Where the Lion Can’t Reach: Unconventional Warfare in Major War

18 snips
Apr 24, 2026
Mark Grdovic, retired Army officer and writer on SOF partnerships with Kurdish forces. Lieutenant General (Ret.) Ken Tovo, former commander of U.S. Army Special Operations Command. They discuss unconventional warfare as support to resistance, when and where it complements or substitutes conventional forces, lessons from partnering with the Peshmerga in 2003, risks of misaligned partners, and how to sell UW to commanders.
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INSIGHT

UW Defined As Support To Resistance

  • Unconventional warfare (UW) is best understood as U.S. support to resistance movements or insurgencies rather than jargon-heavy doctrine.
  • Ken Tovo and Mark Grdovic stress a plain-English definition so non‑SOF leaders and policymakers can grasp its purpose quickly.
INSIGHT

UW Has Deep Historical Continuity

  • Unconventional warfare is historically ubiquitous and often complements conventional campaigns from antiquity through World Wars to post‑9/11 conflicts.
  • Speakers cite Lawrence of Arabia, German African efforts in WWI, and Afghanistan 2001 as recurring examples.
ADVICE

Do A Feasibility Check Before UW

  • Conduct a feasibility assessment before committing to UW: competent indigenous leadership, survivable terrain, contested space, and weak government control are essential.
  • Mark warns skipping this assessment leads to operational success that produces long‑term instability if partners lack alignment or capacity.
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