ID | 131471 |
Title Proper | From Patton to petraeus |
Other Title Information | American generalship and the art of war since 1941 |
Language | ENG |
Author | Evans, Michael |
Publication | 2014. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | War is the great auditor of military institutions and since the attacks of 9/11, the United States military has been under audit for well over a decade - the longest period of continuous warfare in its entire history - and one in which strategic success seems at best, ambiguous and at worst, elusive. Not surprisingly, the strategic skill and battlefield effectiveness of the American military has been a subject of great inquiry over the last five years. Thomas E. Ricks's mammoth study, The Generals: American Military Command from World War II to Today is but the largest instalment in a plethora of works examining America's military performance in the modern era by such writers as David Cloud and Greg Jaffe, Stephen R. Taaffe, Lewis Sorley, Jean Edward Smith, and Fred Kaplan.1 |
`In' analytical Note | Small War and Insurgencies Vol.25, No.1; February 2014: p.186-205 |
Journal Source | Small War and Insurgencies Vol.25, No.1; February 2014: p.186-205 |
Key Words | War ; Warfare ; World War - Ii ; American generalship ; Afghanistan ; Anbar Awakening ; DePuy ; Casey ; Civil-Military Relations - CMR ; Counterinsurgency ; Eisenhower ; Iraq ; Korea ; MacArthur ; Marshall ; Odierno ; Petraeus ; Unified Land Operations ; Vietnam ; Weigley |