Showing posts with label military science. Show all posts
Showing posts with label military science. Show all posts

2/05/2013

Firepower in Limited War: Revised Edition Review

Firepower in Limited War: Revised Edition
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Major General Bob Scales may well be the Army's brightest light and this generation's successor to General Don Starry and Dan Morelli (who inspired the Toffler's book on War and Anti-War). First published by the National Defense University Press in 1990, this book reflects deeply on the limitations of firepower in limited war situations, and the conclusion is a telling indictment of our national intelligence community and our joint military intelligence community, neither of which is willing to break out of their little boxes to find a proper response to this statement: "The common theme in all five case studies presented here is the recurring inability of the side with the firepower advantage to find the enemy with sufficient timeliness and accuracy to exploit that advantage fully and efficiently."

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A study of modern military tactics with an overview of the use of high-technology weapons. Scales charts the development of the use of firepower over the decades and the impact the increasing weight and complexity of firepower has had on the tactics of modern armies. Also includes an examination of how firepower will be deployed in the future.

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1/28/2013

Nineteen Stars: A Study in Military Character and Leadership Review

Nineteen Stars: A Study in Military Character and Leadership
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"Nineteen Stars" is not intended to be the definitive biographies of Generals Eisenhower, Bradley, Marshall, and Patton, but rather a study of their leadership styles illustrated with specific examples. Puryear provides enough background information on each general to put the various decisions and actions into an understandable context. As a study of leadership and management styles of four successful but very different military leaders, this book accomplishes its goals. Puryear gives the reader adequate appreciation of these general officers and the contributions they made, not to just the war effort, but to the military in general.
Again, this is not intended to be full-blown biographies on these military leaders, but rather a leadership study for young officers and officer candidates. However, this book will serve as an able introduction to the lives of these fascinating men, and will probably inspire a broader audience than just military members to look into more indepth works on these key leaders.

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Puryear follows MacArthur, Marshall, Eisenhower and Patton through the years of their military service in both peace and war.

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1/15/2013

Soviet Military Intelligence in War (Soviet (Russian) Military Theory and Practice) Review

Soviet Military Intelligence in War (Soviet (Russian) Military Theory and Practice)
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Soviet Military Intelligence at examines the development of the Role of Military Intelligence during World War II. It looks at the theory that the Red Army started with as the war began and moved on to its slow improvemnt as the war progressed. By mid 1944 the Red Army Intelligence Organs are at thier wartime best and this foundation could be seen for the remainder of the war and on into the Soviet/Russian Army of Tosay.
Must read for Intelligence Proffessionals and those interesed in the German-Soviet battles of WW2.

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This text is the second of three volumes written by Colonel Glantz on the contribution of intelligence and deception operations to the Soviet victory over Nazi Germany. It examines the area where intelligence and operations overlap; the nature of co-ordination between the two; and the support provided by intelligence to operational planning and execution (or the absence of such support). This is not a study of intelligence work as such, but of how intelligence can improve the chances of success on the battlefield by facilitating the more effective and economical use of troops.

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7/07/2012

Science Goes to War: The Search for the Ultimate Weapon--from Greek Fire to Star Wars Review

Science Goes to War: The Search for the Ultimate Weapon--from Greek Fire to Star Wars
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Certain topics demand a broad scope, particularly topics dealing with warfare and military/weapons development over the span of thousands of years. Science Goes to War, by Ernest Volkman, is an interesting book, but ultimately a shadow of what it could have become had it not been constrained within a largely Eurocentric framework. Worse yet, there are a number of factual errors and omissions which sink the book further, thus threatening its credibility as a reliable source of information on the subject. Science Goes to War is a study of how science has been coopted through the ages to serve the interests of the State. And the State's primary desire has always been new and more destructive weapons which scientists or precursors to scientists have caused to come into fruition through their research. It's unfortunate that the Chinese could not have been included in this study other than to point out how and why they fell behind the Europeans in science and technolgy. Because at various periods in their history, the Chinese showed a great penchant for inventiveness and innovation in the area of weapons technolgy. The Warring States Period is instructive of how chronic warfare in early China led to profound upgrades not only in weaponry but tactics. Considerable Chinese R&D had to have gone into these developments, yet the author misses a grand opportunity to highlight them. The same for India, Africa and pre-Columbian America. What a contribution to his readership the author would have made had he discussed how European raiders on the African coast suffered losses at the hands of Africans armed with poison arrows, and how those poisons were developed by nameless African researchers. This was a form of chemical and biological warfare waged by Africans, because the nature of the poisons they used could be plant or bio-based. The errors in this book range from tiny to monumental. The author states that the English had no knights at the Battle of Agincourt when in fact they did. He displays a curious ignorance about the extent of China's use of gunpowder in warfare prior to the Mongol invasions, and most staggering of all is his erroneous depiction of Pizzaro's encounter with the Incas. According to the book, the Incas, arrayed in battle formation, attacked the Spaniards, who in turn defeated them. In fact, the Incas did not attack first. Both sides were not arrayed facing each other in a fair pre-battle setting. What transpired was a sneak attack by Spanish horsemen and infantry against lightly armed or unarmed soldiers escorting the Inca emperor to meet with Pizzaro. What transpired was a massacre. Volkman gives much attention to the English longbow, while neglecting to eloborate upon the capacities of the composite bow, a weapon he cursorily mentions. The Mongols made maximum use of this bow, which had a heavier pull and greater range than the English longbow. Even more odd is his overlooking of the Vikings, whose ships were marvels of naval technology during that era. The later chapters of the book confers a slight redemptiveness to the entire work in the author's effective illustration of the horrific consequences of an unfettered collusion between science and the State. Science Goes to War could have been much greater in scope had the author shown the ambition to cover ground rarely covered in military history. Instead, this work is average at best.

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"It was a thing blameworthy, shameful and barbarous, worthy of severe punishment before God and Man, to wish to bring to perfection an art damageable to one's neighbor and destructive to the human race."This anguished statement from the fifteenth-century Italian mathematician known as Tartaglia, who created the science of ballistics, might have come from any one of thousands of brilliant scientists who, throughout history, have applied their genius to the art of war. Every advance in weaponry from the bronze sword to the stealth bomber has been the product of science, and it is likely that without the pressure of war, science as we know it would not exist.Science Goes to War examines the moral dilemmas, knotty technological problems, and pragmatic necessities that have punctuated the inseparable histories of science and warfare. This remarkably comprehensive volume recounts the 4,000-year quest for the ultimate weapon and reveals how this eternal arms race has both exploited and contributed to "pure" science. Highlights among the many compelling stories in Science Goes to War include: Archimedes and the defense of SyracuseGalileo and the first military R&D laboratoryEmperor Meiji and the technological transformation of JapanThe Manhattan Project

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