ID | 132462 |
Title Proper | Catherine the great |
Other Title Information | a case for operational art |
Language | ENG |
Author | Hilburgh, Adam W |
Publication | 2014. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | The campaigns of Catherine the Great against the Ottoman Empire in the 1770s reveal key characteristics of operational art. Catherine's campaigns serve as an example of lesser-known conflicts that fulfill the necessary conditions of the numerous schools of thought on operational art. The operational commander, Rumiantsev, developed an operational plan to meet the strategic directives developed by Catherine's permanent 'Council attached to the Court'. His armies used successive tactical actions to engage Turkish maneuver forces and lay siege to its fortresses. The armies were organized into combined arms corps that coordinated to remain mutually supporting with the ability to concentrate at the decisive point when required and the Russian armies to not fight in the linear methods of its Western counterparts. Additionally, the armies and corps conducted distributed operations throughout the theater of war, at times hundreds of kilometers separating them. More importantly, Rumiantsev arranged tactical actions to achieve strategic objectives, the most important part of the definition of operational art. These successive, distributed operations should satisfy the schools of thought that consider Napoleon's campaigns as operational art, but those that understand operational art beginning with Grant and Moltke may see that the Russian Campaigns on the frontiers also move beyond the classical strategy of a single point |
`In' analytical Note | Journal of Slavic Military Studies Vol.27, No.2: April-June 2014: p.283-295 |
Journal Source | Journal of Slavic Military Studies Vol.27, No.2: April-June 2014: p.283-295 |
Key Words | Ottoman Empire ; Western Counterparts ; Russian Armies ; Combined Arms Corps ; Catherine ; Operational Commander ; War ; Warfare History ; Russian Campaigns ; Lesser-Known Conflicts ; Tactical Actions ; Operational Art ; Turkish Army |