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The scale and scope of the Briggs Plan, and the tactics used to implement it, were seemingly successful vis-à-vis the Communists. As the historians Bayly and Harper tell us: Chin Peng, for one, had assumed that the forced movement of people by the British would fail, just as similar schemes by the Japanese had failed. The central strategic assumption of the revolution was that the villages would rise in resistance to the British.
Legacy of Violence: A History of the British Empire
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