Military Power: Explaining Victory and Defeat…(book review)

Military Power: Explaining Victory and Defeat…(book review)

a wonkish analysis of combat…

 

 

Book review:

Military Power:

Explaining Victory and Defeat in Modern Battle

 

by Stephen Biddle

Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2004

337 pages

 

Military Power is a fastidiously wonkish analysis of combat and military power.

Biddle makes his case for considering that “force employment,” i.e., combat doctrine and tactics, is at least as important in understanding the outcomes of battle as the count of who has the most guns and the biggest armies.

Earlier authors might have called it “leadership.”

Biddle offers remarkably detailed blow-by-blow commentary about the second battle of the Somme River in 1918, the Allies’ Normandy breakout in 1944, and Operation Desert Storm in 1991.

It’s not an easy read. Military Power will reward the reader who wants to know more.

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Book review. Copyright © Richard Carl Subber 20232 All rights reserved.

 

Book review:

The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes

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    of Arthur Conan Doyle

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As with another eye: Poems of exactitude with 55 free verse and haiku poems,
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