Is there any good literature about how to take over a country with a small number of men? Like a couple of hundred in a coup d'etat kinda way
If you can find anything on Bob Denard, that's probably the closest you can come to that.
He overthrew the government of the Comoros no less then four times.
He also fought for the Rhodesians, for Biafra, for Katanga and in Yemen, Benin, Algeria, Angola and Gabon.
Looks like there's one book on him but it was actually written before his last coup attempt in 95.
>>34197474
...anon
what are you planning
>>34197474
Chill Tayyip, one faked coup was enough
>>34197474
The mouse that roared
enjoy!
>>34198110
Not OP... but Zimbabwe... New Rhodesia...
>>34197474
Go home Antifa
If its a small relatively undeveloped country, look into Karl Penta and his predecessor Desi Bouterse.
>>34197474
Not sure if it's exactly what you mean, but the first thing to come to mind is the shit we pulled in Iran in the 50s.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1953_Iranian_coup_d%27%C3%A9tat
>>34200577
The Iranian coup required to support, either tacit or openly, of several Iranian groups, a lack of opposition from others, the backing of two governments and several corporate concerns to pull off. Just because you overthrow a government doesn't mean you get to control a nation.
>>34200577
>shit WE pulled in Iran
CIA is that you?
>>34197474
Edward Luttwak wrote the definitive book "Coup d’État" in 1968.
Today (as the Turkey purge showed) t needs to be updated for internet comms, but it's still fundamentally sound.
Read (not watch) "The Dogs Of War".
>>34198110
It's finally time to liberate the starving norks
>>34200961
This.
https://latvianhistory.com/2013/01/20/omon-against-latvian-independence-1990-1991/
>>34204482
>>34204482
.
>>34200628
>>34197474
welp, you're on a list now.