This study is an attempt to examine two essential features of the guerrilla movement, its credibility and its effectiveness. In investigating these aspects, the author touches upon closely related problems, such as those of strategy, information and communication, people's war, and of conditions of political settlement and peace. The author tried to confine himself to the point of view of the guerrillas and to convey the ideas and expectations of various spokesmen...
This study is an attempt to examine two essential features of the guerrilla movement, its credibility and its effectiveness. In investigating these aspects, the author touches upon closely related problems, such as those of strategy, information and communication, people's war, and of conditions of political settlement and peace. The author tried to confine himself to the point of view of the guerrillas and to convey the ideas and expectations of various spokesmen and analysts of the two dominant guerrilla organizations, Fateh and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine.