Warbooks List.Pdf

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Warbooks List.Pdf WarBooks Submissions Categorized into fiction and nonfiction, alphabatized by title. Titles selected by more than one contributor are bold. Title Author Media Fiction 12 O'Clock High Movie Armor John Steakley Book Beat to Quarters C.S. Forester Book Burmese Days George Orwell Book Dune Frank Herbert Book Game of Thrones George R.R. Martin Book Gates of Fire Steven Pressfield Book Hunt for Red October Tom Clancy Book Killer Angels Michael Shaara Book Master and Commander Patrick O'Brian Book Matterhorn Karl Marlantes Book Once an Eagle Anton Myrer Book Red Storm Rising Tom Clancy Book Redliners David Drake Book Starship Troopers Robert Heinlein Book Sword of Honor Evelyn Waugh Book The Count of Monte Cristo Alexandre Dumas Book The Cruel Sea Nicholas Montserrat Book The General C.S. Forrester Book The Godfather Mario Puzo Book The Naked and the Dead Norman Mailer Book The Quiet American Graham Greene Book The Road Back Erich Maria Remarque Book The Screwtape Letters C.S. Lewis Book The Walking Drum Louis L'Amour Book The Works of Hemingway Ernest Hemingway Book Winds of War/Winds of Remembrance Herman Wouk Book Nonfiction 19 Stars: A Study in Military Character and Leadership Edgar Puryear Book A Discourse on Winning and Losing John Boyd Book A History of Military Thought: From the Enlightenment to Azar Gat Book the Cold War A History of the American People Paul Johnson Book A History of Warfare John Keegan Book A Peep Into Toorkisthan Rollo Burslem Book A World Transformed George Bush and Brent Scowcroft Book About Face David Hackworth Book Achilles in Vietnam Jonathan Shay Book Afghan Post Adrian Bonenberger Book Agricola Tacitus Book All the Shah's Men Stephen Kinzer Book American Civil-Military Relations Suzanne C. Nielsen and Don M. Snider Book An Introduction to the Devout Life Saint Frances de Sales Book An Unexpected Light Jason Elliot Book An Unorthodox Soldier Tim Spicer Book Architect of Global Jihad Brynjar Lia Book Arms and Influence Thomas Schelling Book Art of War Sun Tzu Book Awakening Warrior Timoth Challans Book Barbarossa Alan Clark Book Behavioural Conflict: Why Understanding People and Their Andrew MacKay and Steve Tathan Book Motivations Will Prove Decisive in Future Conflicts Bismarck: A Life Jonathan Steinberg Book Black Hawk Down: A Story of Modern War Mark Bowden Book Black Hearts Jim Frederick Book Boyd: The Fighter Pilot Who Changed the Art of War Robert Coram Book Brave New War: The Next Stage of Terrorism and John Robb Book the End of Globalization Bravo Two Zero Andy McNab Book Captain Sam Grant: 1822-1861 Llotd Lewis Book Chickenhawk James Mason Book China's Rise and the Two Koreas Scott Snyder Book Clausewitz and the State Peter Paret Book Clausewitz: Philosopher of War Raymond Aron Book Colder Than Hell: A Marine Rifle Company at Chosin Joseph R. Owen Book Reservoir Commander in Chief: Franklin Delano Roosevelt, His Eric Larrabee Book Lieutenants, and Their War Company Command: Unleashing the Power of the Army Nancy Dixon, Nate Allen, Tony Burgess, Pete Book Profession Kilner, and Steve Schwietzer Company Commander Charles B. MacDonald Book Confessions Saint Augustine Book Counterinsurgency David Kilcullen Book Crisis in Command Richard Gabriel and Paul Savage Book Crucible of War Fred Anderson Book Dark Night of the Soul Saint John of the Cross Book Dear Leader: Poet, Spy, Escapee - A Look Inside North Jang Jin Sung Book Korea Defeat Into Victory William Slim Book Eisenhower Carlo D'Este Book Escape from Camp 14 Blaine Harden Book Essence of Decision: Explaining the Cuban Missile Crisis Graham Allison and Phillip Zelikow Book Fighting Talk Colin Gray Book Gallic Wars Caesar Book Gender in the Military Anita Schjolset Book General George Crook: His Autobiography George Crook Book Good to Great James Collins Book Guns, Sails, and Empire Carlo M. Cipolla Book Hadji Murad Leo Tolstoy Book Hell in a Very Small Place Bernard Fall Book Heroes of the Age: Moral Fault Lines on the Afghan David B. Edwards Book Frontier Home Game: An Accidental Guide to Fatherhood Michael Lewis Book Honorable Warrior Lewis Sorley Book Hope Is Not A Method: What Business Leaders Can Learn Gordon Sullivan and Michael Harper Book From America's Army House to House: An Epic Memoir of War David Bellavia Book If I Die in a Combat Zone Tim O'Brien Book Incident Response: Investigating Computer Crime Kevin Mandia Book Innovation and the Arms Race Matthew Evangelista Book Intrinsic Motivation at Work Kenneth Thomas Book It Happened on the Way to War Rye Barcott Book Just and Unjust War Michael Walzer Book Leadership for the Twenty-First Century Joseph Rost Book Lee's Lieutenants Douglass Southall Freeman Book Living the Martial Way: A Manual for the Way A Modern Forrest E. Morgan Book Warrior Should Think Losing Small Wars Frank Ledwidge Book Magnetic Mountain Stephen Kotkin Book Makers of Modern Strategy Peter Paret Book Man's Search for Meaning Victor Frankl Book Masters of War: History's Greatest Strategic Thinkers Andrew R. Wilson Audio Military Innovation in the Interwar Period Williamson Murray and Allan R. Millett BookLecture Military Power: Explaining Victory and Defeat in Modern Stephen Biddle Book Battle Modern Strategy Colin Gray Book Morality and War David Fisher Book Munitions of the Mind: A History of Propaganda from the Philip M. Taylor Book Ancient World to the Present Day My War Gone By, I Miss It So Anthony Loyd Book My Year Inside Radical Islam: A Memoir Daveed Gartenstein-Ross Book Nichomachean Ethics Aristotle Book Nothing to Envy: Ordinary Lives in North Korea Barbara Demick Book Oman's Insurgencies J.E. Peterson Book On Guerilla Warfare Mao Zedong Book On Killing: The Psychological Cost of Learning to Kill in David Grossman Book War and Society On the Psychology of Military Incompetence Norman F. Dixon Book On War Carl von Clausewitz Book Operations Mincemeat Ben MacIntyre Book Ordinary Men: Reserve Police Battalion 101 and the Final Christopher Browning Book Solution in Poland Out of the Mountains David Kilcullen Book Outliers: The Story of Success Malcolm Gladwell Book Painting as a Pastime Winston Churchill Article Partners in Command Mark Perry Book Platoon Leader James R. McDonough Book Practical Unix and Internet Security Simon Garfinkle and Gene Spafford Book Prodigal Soldiers James Kitfield Book Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World that Can't Stop Susan Cain Book Talking Rebel Hearts: Journeys Within the IRAs Soul Kevin Toolis Book Return of a King Williams Dalrymple Book Rules of the Game: Jutland and British Naval Command Andrew Gordon Book Science, Strategy, and War Frans Osinga Book Secret Warriors Steven Emerson Book Shake Hands With the Devil: The Failure of Humanity in Romeo Dallaire Book Rwanda Six Silent Men: 101st LRP/Rangers Gary A. Linderer Book Small Unit Leadership Dandridge Malone Book Small Wars: Their Principles and Practices C.E. Callwell Book Soldier: The Memoirs of Matthew B. Ridgeway Matthew B. Ridgeway Book Stalingrad: The Fateful Siege, 1942-1943 Antony Beevor Book Steel My Soldier's Heart David Hackworth Book Story of the Soul Saint Therese of Lisieux Book Strategic Intuition Douglas McGregor Book Strategy A.A. Svechin Book Strategy Lawrence Freedman Book Strategy: The Logic of War and Peace Edward Luttwak Book Streetlights and Shadows: Searching for the Keys to Gary Klein Book Adaptive Decision Making Systems Thinking: Managing Chaos and Complexity Jamshid Gharajedaghi Book TCP/IP Illustrated W. Richard Stevens Book Tempo Venkatesh Rao Book The Accidental Guerilla David Kilcullen Book The Age of American Unreason Susan Jacoby Book The American Way of War Russell Weigley Book The Aquariums of Pyongyang Kang Chol-Hwan Book The Arabs: A History Eugene Rogan Book The Assassin's Gate George Packer Book The Baburnama: Memoirs of Babur, Prince and Emperor Wheeler M. Thackston Book The Bible Book The Black Swan Nicholas Nassim Taleb Book The Challenge of Command: Reading for Military Excellence Roger Nye Book The Education of Henry Adams Henry Adams Book The Evolution of Strategy Beatrice Heuser Book The Face of Battle John Keegan Book The Fog of War: Eleven Lessons from the Life of Robert S. Movie McNamara The Franco-Prussian War Michael Howard Book The Game Ken Dryden Book The Generals Thomas E. Ricks Book The Great War in Modern Memory Paul Fussell Book The Hedgehog and the Fox Isaiah Berlin Book The Histories Polybius Book The History of Rome Livy Book The Hound of Heaven Francis Thompson Poem The Human Face of War Jim Storr Book The Impossible State: North Korea, Past and Future Victor Cha Book The Inner Ring C.S. Lewis Article The Innovators Walter Isaacson Book The Innovator's Dilemma Clayton Christensen Book The Irony of American History Reinhold Niebuhr Book The Logic of Violence Stathis Kalyvas Book The Making of the Atomic Bomb Richard Rhodes Book The Man Who Would be King Rudyard Kipling Book The Mask of Command John Keegan Book The Masks of War Carl Builder Book The Memoirs of Ulysses S. Grant Ulysses S. Grant Book The Military Revolution Debate Cliff Rodgers Book The Mission, The Men, and Me Pete Blaber Book The Moral Warrior: Ethics and Service in the U.S. Military Martin L. Cook Book The Most Noble Adventure Greg Berhman Book The Origin of Wealth: The Radical Remaking of Economics Eric D. Beinhocker Book and What it Means for Business and Society The Outpost Jake Tapper Book The Papers of George Catlett Marshall, Volume I George C. Marshall Book The Passion of Command B.P. McCoy Book The Patton Papers, 1885-1940 Martin Blumenson Book The Peloponnesian War Thucydides Book The Politics of Space Security James Clay Moltz Book The Price of Glory: Verdun, 1916 Alistair Horne Book The Prince Niccolo Machiavelli Book The Psychology of Intelligence Analysis Richards J.
Recommended publications
  • Downloadable Versions of All Editions, Past, Present and Future
    SPECIAL EDITION Linking Ends and Means The Continuing Relevance of Clausewitz Antulio J. Echevarria II Hugh Smith Lukas Milevski Clausewitz’s Supreme Question: Clausewitz’s Definition of War and The Mirage of Post- Reconsidering his Legacy its Limits Clausewitzianism: Understanding War and Politics on the Frontier of Clausewitzian Thought David Betz M.L.R. Smith Lennart Souchon In Search of a Point: The Blob at The Occam’s Razor of Strategic Strategy, War, and the Relevance of War Theory: The Relevance of Carl von Clausewitz Clausewitz for Political Conduct Military Strategy Magazine ISSN 2708-3071 All Rights Reserved © The IJ Infinity Group, Ltd. Company number: 514895630 Bar Kochva 15/15 6342619 Tel Aviv, Israel Website: https://www.militarystrategymagazine.com Email: [email protected] Publishing Co., The IJ Infinity Group, Contributor Colin S. Gray Contributor Kevin C.M. Benson Ltd. Contributor Antulio J. Echevarria II Contributor Gur Laish Publisher Dr. A. E. Stahl Contributor Edward Luttwak Contributor Vanya E. Bellinger aestahl@militarystrategymagazine. Contributor Shay Shabtai Contributor Lukas Milevski com Contributor Donald Stoker Contributor Nathan K. Finney Editor William F. Owen william@militarystrategymagazine. Contributor Peri Golan Contributor Eitan Shamir com Contributor Hugh Smith, AM Contributor Kobi Michael Contributor David Betz Contributor Ron Tira Subscribe For Free Military Strategy Magazine is distributed via www.militarystrategymagazine.com Contact If you’d like to contact an editor regarding submission of articles see militarystrategymagazine.com/ contact Advertising Equiries Interested in advertising in Military Strategy Magazine? adverts@militarystrategymagazine. com Military Strategy Magazine (MSM), previously Infinity Journal, is a privately funded strategy journal, founded in London and based out of Tel Aviv, Israel.
    [Show full text]
  • This Electronic Thesis Or Dissertation Has Been Downloaded from the King’S Research Portal At
    This electronic thesis or dissertation has been downloaded from the King’s Research Portal at https://kclpure.kcl.ac.uk/portal/ Judicial Strategy in Insurgencies Ledwidge, Frank Awarding institution: King's College London The copyright of this thesis rests with the author and no quotation from it or information derived from it may be published without proper acknowledgement. END USER LICENCE AGREEMENT Unless another licence is stated on the immediately following page this work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International licence. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ You are free to copy, distribute and transmit the work Under the following conditions: Attribution: You must attribute the work in the manner specified by the author (but not in any way that suggests that they endorse you or your use of the work). Non Commercial: You may not use this work for commercial purposes. No Derivative Works - You may not alter, transform, or build upon this work. Any of these conditions can be waived if you receive permission from the author. Your fair dealings and other rights are in no way affected by the above. Take down policy If you believe that this document breaches copyright please contact [email protected] providing details, and we will remove access to the work immediately and investigate your claim. Download date: 23. Sep. 2021 Judicial Strategy in Insurgencies By Francis Andrew Ledwidge A Thesis Submitted for examination for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at Kings College London January 2015 The copyright of this thesis rests with the author and no quotation from it or information derived from it may be published without proper acknowledgement 1 Abstract This thesis is concerned primarily with the use of law and courts as strategic assets in insurgency.
    [Show full text]
  • Selfstudy-Program-V1.2.Pdf
    DRAFT 1 Table of Contents The Self Study Program is currently hosted online at Warrior University, a website which requires AKO access. To download .pdf books/articles (where available) either log-in to the Warrior University or contact [email protected] Introduction to the Program………………………………………………………………………………………………..2 Combined Arms Operations…………………………………………………………………………………………………7 Training……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….14 Military Leadership………………………………………………………………………………………………………………20 Leader Development……………………………………………………………………………………………………………28 Learning Adaptation and Innovation……………………………………………………………………………………38 Strategy and the Political Dimensions of War……………………………………………………………………….44 The Nature and Character of War and Warfare…………………………………………………………………….53 Counterinsurgency……………………………………………………………………………………………………………….60 Mission Command………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..68 Afghanistan…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..72 The Study and Use of Military History……………………………………………………………………………………80 Technology, Doctrine, and Combat Developments ……………………………………………………………….88 Still in Development: Armor and Cavalry Heritage, Tactics, and Small Unit Actions Infantry Heritage, Tactics, and Small Unit Actions Enemy Organizations and Potential Adversaries in the Operating Environment Profession of Arms Logistics Operational Art, Multi-National Operations, and Joint Warfare Global and Regional Security Issues Moral, Ethical, and Psychological Dimensions of War Maneuver Leader Self Study Program Introduction
    [Show full text]
  • In Paradoxes of Professionalism
    Paradoxes of Professionalism Paradoxes of Risa Brooks Professionalism Rethinking Civil-Military Relations in the United States In 2009, President Barack Obama ordered a comprehensive review of the United States’ strategy for the war in Afghanistan that revealed some troubling dynamics in the coun- try’s civil-military relations. During the review, top military leaders, including the commander of the International Security Assistance Force led by the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, Gen. Stanley McChrystal, pushed for “a fully resourced counterinsurgency” and a controversial new troop commitment, ar- guing that it was the best available option.1 Accounts of the review reveal, however, that U.S. military leaders seemed to underplay the political and stra- tegic constraints that mitigated against a successful counterinsurgency, and that they were impervious to other options that might better advance Obama’s overarching goal of preventing foreign terrorists from attacking the United States.2 They also seemed dismayed by public perceptions that their appeals for support for their preferred plans from allies in Congress and the press, as well as in public commentary, were boxing in the president.3 In 2019, McChrystal reºected that perhaps he should have avoided controversy and proceeded with fewer troops, but that he had no other choice than to advo- cate for the deployment of more forces. As he framed it, while the war in Afghanistan was the civilian leadership’s responsibility, as a “techni- cian,” he needed the additional troops to achieve his operational objectives.4 McChrystal’s comments are striking, revealing how narrowly he conceived of Risa Brooks is Allis Chalmers Associate Professor of Political Science at Marquette University.
    [Show full text]
  • 20140827 Syllabus Military Power
    Yale University Department of Political Science Syllabus MILITARY POWER Political Science 140/674 Global Affairs 381 (Seminar) Fall 2014 Nuno P. Monteiro www.nunomonteiro.org [email protected] Class: Wednesdays, 3:30-5:20, Rosenkranz #102 Office Hours: Tuesdays 3:30-5:30, Rosenkranz #337 (book through my website) COURSE OBJECTIVES AND OUTLINE This seminar explores the foundations, application, evolution, and limits of military power. We will read the main foundational text on the topic – Clausewitz’s On War – and pair it with contemporary readings. The course will cover topics such as the relation between military power and politics, technology, coercion, and ethics, as well as the sources of military effectiveness, the problems of civil-military relations, and contemporary topics such as the revolution in military affairs and the problems with military occupations. REQUIREMENTS, GRADING, AND DEADLINES This course has no prerequisites. The course will consist in a series of seminar sessions with pre-assigned readings. Students are expected to do all the readings prior to each session, as well as attend and participate in all sessions. The weekly sessions will focus on (i) laying out the main arguments of the assigned readings and (ii) critically discussing them. I will open up the session with a short (20-minute) lecture on the topic of the day, to be followed by a general examination and discussion of the week’s readings. Final grades will be assigned as follows: • Seminar participation: 25%; • Response papers (5 x 2 pages): 40%; • Final paper (12-15 pages): 40%. Please note that in order to receive an overall passing grade, students must receive a passing grade in all three components of the final grade.
    [Show full text]
  • War As Nothing but a Duel: War As an Institution and the Construction of the Western Military Profession
    J. Military Stud. 2018; X(X): 1–13 Research Article Open Access Ilmari Käihkö* War as nothing but a duel: war as an institution and the construction of the Western military profession DOI 10.2478/jms-2018-0003 armed forces, which provided enemies with vulnerabili- Received December 18, 2017; accepted June 20, 2018 ties ripe to be exploited (1995: 60). This was a problem that Hew Strachan returned to when he argued that the end of Abstract: Like all repetitive human interaction, even war has the Cold War made the past decades’ strategic vocabulary been institutionalized and fought according to conventions obsolete (2013: 41). Arguably, the polarization between the and norms. Historically, this institutionalization is apparent two superpowers and the mutual possession of nuclear from the way war has been compared to the duel, first in weapons meant that war had lost its rationality: no jus- the 14th century and most famously by Carl von Clausewitz tification could warrant the resulting degree of death and 5 centuries later. This article continues this train of thought destruction of nuclear war. As a result, all other strategic and argues that the observed limits of Western “professional thinking paled in comparison to deterrence and avoiding – orthodoxy” and “strategic vocabulary” can be traced to how not fighting – war. Yet, when the threat of Armageddon war has been institutionalized by the military profession. passed, threats that had previously been deemed insignif- This offers an alternative explanation to the prevailing views icant gained in importance. This was especially the case of why the West has struggled in contemporary wars: it is the with nonstate actors.
    [Show full text]
  • Download Dit Artikel in PDF Formaat
    HERBERG-ROTHE Theory and Practice: the Inevitable Dialectics Thinking with and beyond Clausewitz’s Concept of Theory Since the 1990s various influential scholars have argued that Clausewitz’s theory is no longer applicable, not only in relation to contemporary conflicts, but also in general. A series of authors consequently has attempted to develop a new understanding of Clausewitz’s theory, based on the ‘trinity’, which differs fundamentally from his world- renowned formula as well as the absolute of war. This article further elaborates the ‘wondrous trinity’, the ‘floating’ (Clausewitz) and developing (Hegel) balance of Clausewitz’s three tendencies of the trinity (violence/force, fight/struggle, warring community) for a better understanding of his concept of theory, which – to some extent surprisingly – has not been developed before. Andreas Herberg-Rothe* even self-destructive2 to continue to use this The essential difference is that war is not an exer- theory as the basis for understanding and as a cise of the will directed at inanimate matter, as is guide to political action, given the revolutio- the case with the mechanical arts, or at matter nary changes in war and violence occurring in which is animate but passive and yielding, as is the world’s communities. Clausewitz, it is the case with the human mind in the fine arts. In proposed, was only concerned with war war, the will is directed at an animate object that between states employing regular armies, reacts. Clausewitz, On War (149)1 whereas conflict today would mainly involve non-state actors. Both claims, however, are overdrawn, with respect to both the core contents of Clause- ince the 1990s various influential authors witz’s theory and the unique characteristics of Shave argued that Clausewitz’s theory is no today’s ‘New Wars’.3 With the exception of longer applicable, not only in relation to much of Africa and some very old conflicts at contemporary conflicts, but also in general.
    [Show full text]
  • Strategy and Crisis Syllabus
    4/16/15 History 1995 / GSAS 90625 Strategy and Crisis Spring 2015 Seminar Room: CGIS S-020 Meeting time: W., 2-4 Prof. Niall Ferguson Center for European Studies, Room 124 Office Hours: Mondays, 4-6 p.m. [email protected] Teaching Fellows Jeremiah Schwarz [email protected] Emile Simpson [email protected] Guillaume Wadia [email protected] Course description The moment of crisis is the moment of discrimination: it forces decisions of obvious consequence, pitting rival theories and their proponents against one another. The crisis is par excellence the moment at which theory and practice meet. This course offers two analytical perspectives based on the study of twelve diplomatic and military crises that are frequently seen as turning points in the modern era. To contextualize each crisis, we explore what the dominant strategic theories were at the time and how they were deployed in practice in the heat of the crisis. (Think of this a vertical, historically oriented axis of understanding.) Then we examine the linkages between crises. Are there modes of behavior or thought that are of general utility in such moments? Can strategic thought ever truly claim to be universally applicable? Did decision-makers learn and apply lessons from previous crises, and with what success? (Think of this as a horizontal, thematic axis of understanding.) At its core, the course is an argument for bringing history back into the core of strategic thought. In short, it is an exercise in applied history. The seminar will meet once a week, and each week will focus on a particular crisis.
    [Show full text]
  • 1 “Paradoxes of Professionalism: Rethinking Civil-Military Relations
    “Paradoxes of Professionalism: Rethinking Civil-Military Relations in the United States." Risa Brooks In 2009, President Barack Obama ordered a comprehensive review of the United States’ strategy for the war in Afghanistan that revealed some troubling dynamics in the country’s civil-military relations. During the review, top military leaders, including the commander of the International Security Assistance Force led by the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, Gen. Stanley McChrystal, pushed for “a fully resourced counterinsurgency” and a controversial new troop commitment, arguing it was the best path forward.1 Accounts of the review reveal, however, that U.S. military leaders seemed to underplay the political and strategic constraints that mitigated against a successful counterinsurgency, and that they were impervious to other options that might better advance Obama’s overarching goal of preventing foreign terrorists from attacking the United States.2 They also seemed dismayed by public perceptions that they were boxing-in the president through appeals of support for their favored plans from allies in Congress and the Risa Brooks is Allis Chalmers Associate Professor of Political Science at Marquette University. For helpful comments and reactions, the author is grateful to Alice Friend, Jim Golby, Michael Robinson, Heidi Urben, Kori Schake, Lionel Beehner, and participants in the 2018 conference at West Point’s Modern War Institute, “Blurred Lines: Civil-Military Relations and Modern War.” The author also thanks the anonymous reviewers and editors for their excellent advice. All views expressed in the article are the author’s. 1. Bob Woodward, Obama’s Wars (New York: Simon and Schuster, 2010), p.
    [Show full text]
  • Factotum: the US Military in the Twenty-First Century
    COMMENTARY Factotum The US Military in the Twenty- First Century LT COL RYAN SANFORD, US AIR FOrcE istory has not ended, certainly not as Francis Fukuyama asserted it would following the end of the Cold War.1 The enduring nature of strategy and war tick on like the mechanical movement of a timepiece. While the Hcharacter of twenty- first- century conflict and its concomitant forms of warfare appear chameleon- like, an enduring nature remains. Certainly, the Soviet Union’s demise hearkened novel “nation- building” and peacekeeping efforts in Eastern Europe, followed shortly by a war on terrorism. Still, novelty allures. There is sa- gacity, however, in a prophet’s word that there is nothing new under the sun. Hence, the proper role of the US military is the same as it was since the nation’s birth: it is a servant of the state. This truism borders on banality and requires qualification. As Martin Cook asserted, “The United States finds itself at a- mo ment history hands to few . [which] challenges . our thinking about the . role of the profession of arms.”2 Despite this revelation, frustration foments when civilian leadership asks the military to accomplish tasks not typically considered native to its abilities.3 Despite changes in the strategic environment, they are “unique in detail, not in kind”; thus, the US military’s proper role remains con- stant as the dutiful servant of the state.4 The emergence of a bipolarity amid the international order and advent of nu- clear weapons motivated Morris Janowitz to reconsider the profession of the military officer.
    [Show full text]
  • Wider Officer Competence: the Importance of Politics and Practical
    Article Armed Forces & Society 2019, Vol. 45(1) 59-77 ª The Author(s) 2017 Wider Officer Article reuse guidelines: sagepub.com/journals-permissions DOI: 10.1177/0095327X17737498 Competence: The journals.sagepub.com/home/afs Importance of Politics and Practical Wisdom Carsten F. Roennfeldt1 Abstract Identifying and developing officer competence is important to a nation’s security and a crucial attribute of a legitimate military establishment. Critics have claimed that the U.S. officer corps favors a narrow conception of expertise that limits the armed forces’ utility as an instrument of policy. Drawing from the dialogue between Huntington and Janowitz, as well as Aristotle’s notion of practical wisdom, this article proposes a wider understanding of officer competence consisting of four distinct conceptual categories. The U.S. defense establishment favors “military skill” over other categories of competence. As a result, the officer corps is poorly pre- pared for 21st-century warfare. To remedy this situation, professional military education should cultivate military leaders that, in addition to military skill, have sociopolitical competence and practical wisdom. In this context, this article suggests strategies to develop such competencies that officers need to be able to achieve a diversity of national political goals. Keywords military profession, Huntington, Aristotle, practical wisdom, phronesis, politics, civil–military relations, professional military education 1 Norwegian Military Academy, Oslo, Norway Corresponding Author: Carsten F. Roennfeldt, Norwegian Military Academy, Utfartsveien 2, Oslo 0593, Norway. Email: [email protected] 60 Armed Forces & Society 45(1) Introduction This article proposes a conceptual framework to discuss a question of fundamental importance to national security: What proficiencies do U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • Personal Theories of Power and Publishing Them on the Bridge, I Wasn’T Immediately Onard Board
    Power Personal Theories of Exploring Strategy Through the The Bridge & CIMSEC Compendium Eyes of Emerging Leaders Edited by: Nathan Finney Richard Ganske Mikhail Grinberg Tim Wolfe Table of Contents Introduction 2 Theory Properly Constructed 5 The Cognitive Domain 8 Defense Industrial Base 11 Joint Action 15 Cyber Power 19 Social Choice 22 Land Power 26 Sea Power 29 Amphibious Power 32 Space Power 35 A Personal Theory of Strategy 38 Nuclear Weapons 41 Sea Power 44 Air Power 47 Citations by Article 50 1 Introduction ard When Rich Ganske first mentioned the idea of writing about personal theories of power and publishing them on The Bridge, I wasn’t immediately onard board. I thought it would be a niche product, mostly created by friends who would provide content more out of loyalty than an original idea on theory. I’m pleased to say that I could not have been more wrong. With Rich heading the concept, we quickly sketched out some possible topics people could cover. Air power and land power, of course…we could each cover those.cove We then started thinking about other that tended to inhabit the blogosphere and might be willing to produce some Securityinteresting ideas. We knew more- than a few eloquentand navalists, so sea power would likely- be easily red. They also provided us with a valuable link to another great blogging organization,invited the Center for International Maritime , which agreed to cross post the articles open up another avenue to a well informed audience. With the “geographic”five domains largely addressed, we shifted our approach; we writers we knew to write, allowing them to develop their own topics.
    [Show full text]