Subtle acts like gossiping, exclusion, or unrealistic deadlines (e.g., in "48-hour assignments") serve as modern-day sabotage. 5. Countermeasures and Prevention
The concept was utilized in World War II, famously documented by the CIA in the Simple Sabotage Field Manual (1944) to encourage resistance against enemy states. subtitle Sabotage
The term originated from the French "sabot" (wooden shoe) to describe workers interrupting production. Subtle acts like gossiping
Simple sabotage differs from technical acts by requiring no special tools, often executed by ordinary citizens to cause disruption with low detection risk. or unrealistic deadlines (e.g.
Performing work poorly but appearing innocent.