A rhizome manoeuvre is a surprise attack in a built environment, made from an unexpected direction, such as through a wall or floor. It is a key concept in contemporary warfare tactics, techniques, and procedures.
The name derives from plant rhizomes, stem structures which grow horizontally underground through soil, allowing new shoots to grow upwards in other places.[1]
^Flaherty, C. (2010) Command, Influence and Information in 3D Tactics. Journal of Information Warfare. (9)1: 18-31.
A rhizomemanoeuvre is a surprise attack in a built environment, made from an unexpected direction, such as through a wall or floor. It is a key concept...
Dynamic defence, is a key concept in RhizomeManoeuvre, and Three-Dimensional (3D) Tactics Analysis, and is a key concept in contemporary Terrorist Tactics...
walls within houses to get into the next house (known as mouse-holing/RhizomeManoeuvre), in order to avoid booby-trapped doors and road-side bombs. The paratroopers...
breaking openings in walls between houses (known as mouse-holing/RhizomeManoeuvre). Since its formation, the unit has operated both in Israel and abroad...
Retrieved January 22, 2017. Bianconi, Giampaolo (5 July 2012). "VHS @ MAD". Rhizome. Retrieved August 5, 2015. Kitroeff, Natalie (5 March 2015). "Yale Is Building...
Unterberger-Probst, Animation of the first moving pictures in film history, at Rhizome Burns, Paul. The History of the Discovery of Cinematography: An Illustrated...