Category
page 1Counterinsurgency

counter-insurgency
thumb|right|275px|U.S. Marines and ANA soldiers on patrol during counterinsurgency operations in [[Marjah, Afghanistan, February 2010]]thumb|right|275px|Police question a civilian during the Malayan Emergency. Counterinsurgency involves action from both military and police authorities.
Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation
United States military school
search and destroy
type of military counterinsurgency strategy, killing all enemies then quickly retreating
Provincial Reconstruction Team
military unit
counter-insurgency aircraft
type of ground attack aircraft specialized in low-intensity warfare
Selous Scouts
Rhodesian Special Forces Unit during the Bush War
Type 16 maneuver combat vehicle
wheeled tank destroyer
Israeli demolition of Palestinian property
war method used by the Israeli government against Palestinians

Bandenbekämpfung
thumb|250px|Heinrich Himmler's report Number 51 from 1 October 1942 to 1 December 1942 detailing the murder of "bandits" and Jews in [[Southern Russia, Ukraine, and the Bialystok District]]
In German military history, ' (), also referred to as Nazi security warfare' during World War II, refers to the concept and military doctrine of countering resistance or insurrection in the rear area during wartime with extreme brutality. The doctrine provided a rationale for disregarding the established laws of war and for targeting any number of groups, from armed guerrillas to civilians, as "bandits" or

Rebel Inc.
2018 video game
Free Cossacks
Ukrainian Cossacks that were organized as volunteer militia units in the spring of 1917 in the Ukrainian People's Republic
Strategic Hamlet Program
Rural Vietnamese anti-communist strategy
Suppression of Communism Act, 1950
South African law, renamed the "Internal Security Act" in 1976
Flechas
The Flechas (Portuguese for Arrows) were an elite paramilitary tactical unit of the Portuguese secret police (PIDE, latter renamed DGS) that operated in Angola and Mozambique during the Portuguese Colonial War. Unlike most of the other Portuguese special forces that were employed in the several theatres of operations of the conflict, the Flechas were not a de jure military unit but a PIDE/DGS (secret police) unit.