£8.99
Proxy Wars and Non-State Actors: Militias, Movements and States
Understanding how militias and rebel movements became the frontline tools of regional powers since 2001
Since 9/11, the Middle East has become a laboratory of indirect conflict where state rivals fight through militias, insurgent movements, and sectarian networks rather than open armies.
This book traces the rise of proxy wars from Afghanistan and Iraq to Syria, Yemen, and Gaza, showing how governments arm, fund, and direct local non state actors to shape battlefield outcomes while preserving plausible deniability.
Drawing on modern history, contemporary conflict analysis, and frontline reporting, it unpacks how Iranian-backed Hezbollah and Kataib Hezbollah, U.S.-supported Iraqi and Syrian opposition groups, Gulf-funded Islamist factions, and others turned tribal militias and religious movements into standing political-military forces.
Instead of dry theory, it focuses on the lived realities of militants, their communities, and the civilians caught between sponsors and local agendas.