'The foundation of Out of the Mountains is Mr. Kilcullen's theory of competitive control, which zooms in on the insurgent networks that other theories glance at from a bird's-eye perspective. The theory suggests that populations respond to a predictable, ordered, normative system, which tells them exactly what they need to do, and not do, in order to be safe. Remove that normative system, and chaos could easily ensue - The answers to the questions Mr. Kilcullen poses will evolve over time. But his insistence that it is time to drag ourselves - body and mind - out of the mountains serves as a reminder that complacency remains one of the most serious threats to U.S. national security.' * Wall Street Journal *
'Kilcullen is a natural storyteller with a sharp and sympathetic mind. His first-hand experiences in Somalia, Afghanistan and elsewhere carry added credibility given his track record as a senior adviser to David Petraeus, the star US general in Iraq, and later to Nato in Afghanistan. Thankfully, he does not limit himself to dire warnings. He broaches solutions. It would be a start, he contends, if policymakers and security strategists approached the world's mega-cities as living entities to be analysed in their own right, not fixed locations, or part of a nation state. We have to keep up with the pace of their transformation.' * The Daily Telegraph *
'A wide-ranging, astute and squirm-inducing evaluation of the future of military operations. - Kilcullen delivers a lucid, important study that American leaders should read.' * Kirkus Reviews *
'Kilcullen has a rare ability to combine serious theory with the insight of an experienced practitioner - [and] brings his narrative to life by using contemporary examples, including the recent revolts in Libya and Syria and the 2008 terrorist attacks in Mumbai.' * Lawrence D. Freedman, Foreign Affairs *
'This is the mature work of someone who's thought long and hard about conflict. Out on the Mountains deserves to be read (and argued about) by anyone who is interested in the war or the shape of the modern world [and] every officer needs to be familiar with its arguments.' * Sydney Morning Herald *
'This is a brilliant book by the most unfettered and analytically acute mind in the military intelligentsia. Kilcullen unflinchingly confronts the nightmare of endless warfare in the slums of the world.' * Mike Davis, author of Planet of Slums *
'At a time when many Western militaries are slashing defence budgets while increasing investments in high-tech weapons, Kilcullen's book provides an argument for reassessing defence priorities - This is an important book. ' * H.R. McMaster, Survival *
'Soldiers and scholars both listen to Kilcullen - and now the development community should as well - He comes out of the mountains and plunges head first into the teeming megacities of the developing world. It is well worth following him there.' * International Affairs *
'David Kilcullen brilliantly illuminates a coming dystopian urban world, part Blade Runner and part Minority Report. He cogently argues that we must rapidly find a way to build our own security networks to prepare for the coming age of urban guerrillas. Out of the Mountains crystallizes this sadly probable future in vivid and practical terms.' * Admiral James Stavridis, USN (Ret), Former Supreme Allied Commander at NATO and Dean, The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University *
'Out of the Mountains is a wide-ranging, thought-provoking book that draws on and synthesises concepts and arguments from geography, ecology, political science, sociology and military strategy - it will spawn ideas, and pull our attention to the emerging megacities of the world and their assorted urban guerrillas.' * Shashank Joshi, Global: The International Briefing *
'Drawing on a lifetime's practical and theoretical expertise in counter-insurgency and irregular warfare, David Kilcullen considers the security problems likely to be posed by the growth of littoral megacities where governments will find their authority challenged by a range of non-state armed groups. As this book eloquently argues, dealing with the insecurities that will inevitably arise from such situations will require militaries to adopt very different approaches and to work within a framework in which many different civilian skills are brought to bear. Anyone who has responsibilities for international security or who cares about the future of governance in an increasingly over-crowded and resource-stressed world needs to read this book.' * Nigel Inkster, former director of operations and intelligence for the British Secret Intelligence Service *
'There is no better guide to the future of warfare than David Kilcullen. Surveying the scene from Mumbai to Mogadishu, and Syria to San Pedro Sula, Kilcullen persuasively argues that conflict will increasingly be in crowded, coastal, and connected cities. This is a gripping and essential read.' * Theo Farrell, Head of War Studies, King's College London *
'David Kilcullen has given us a definitive analysis of the characteristics of much recent conflict with its overlapping mix of terrorism and insurgency, gangsterism and racketeering, legitimate and criminal business, tribal and gang rivalries and perverse economic incentives. He draws striking lessons from the difficulties of providing security and governance in those circumstances and projects them into the ever more crowded slums of the mega-cities now sprawling along the coastlines of the developing world. His sombre conclusions should be essential reading.' * Sir David Omand, former UK Security and Intelligence Coordinator *