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ID148021
Title ProperChange and discontinuity
Other Title Informationwar and Afghanistan, 1904–1924
LanguageENG
AuthorWyatt, Christopher M
Summary / Abstract (Note)In the imaginations of many, war in British India had its focus on the North-West Frontier and was fought against the tribes of that region. However, British thinking about Indian defence involving Afghanistan underwent tremendous change over the period under consideration. British plans to meet a Russian invasion on the Kabul-Kandahar Line in 1904 resembled those of any other Nineteenth Century Imperial campaign, with numbers of infantry and cavalry still being thought of and referred to as bayonets and sabres. Twenty years later, heavily influenced by the experiences of the Great War in the region and the Third Afghan War and associated operations, the calculus was different with logistics changed by motor vehicles and the introduction of what today are referred to as force multipliers, such as aeroplanes and machine guns. It was over this period that warfare as fought and conceptualised by men like Napoleon gave way to modern practices familiar to us today.
`In' analytical NoteAsian Affairs Vol. 47, No.3; Nov 2016: p.366-385
Journal SourceAsian Affairs Vol: 47 No 3
Key WordsAir Force ;  Afghanistan ;  India ;  Russia ;  RAF ;  First World War ;  Waziristan ;  Frontier ;  Third Afghan War ;  Habibullah ;  Amanullah ;  Defence of India ;  Abdur Rahman


 
 
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