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WARTIME DOCTRINE (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   128550


Blue versus orange: the United States naval war college, Japan, and the old enemy in the Pacific, 1945-1946 / Friedman, Hal M   Journal Article
Friedman, Hal M Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract In the fall of 1945, the United States Naval War College (NWC) began its transition from a reduced wartime status to a peacetime stance as the Navy's premier postgraduate school. Because the war ended so quickly, the NWC was not able to change its curriculum for 1945-1946, which had been planned the previous academic year. It is therefore not surprising to find that the primary supposed enemy for Blue (the United States) in the coming academic year was still Orange (Japan). This study looks at the Operations Problems simulated at the immediate end of the war and explores the mix of interwar and wartime doctrine that was employed to prepare for the early Cold War.
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2
ID:   128552


Goodnight Saigon: American provincial advisors' final impressions of the Vietnam War / Boylan, Kevin M   Journal Article
Boylan, Kevin M Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract This article tests the veracity of the Revisionist thesis that the United States effectively won the Vietnam War in the years after Tet 1968. Since quantitative indicators could not accurately measure who was winning the "War in the Villages," it relies instead upon qualitative assessments made by U.S. Province Senior Advisors-the Americans best qualified to make such judgments. It is organized into three sections dealing with the key Revisionist claims that the Vietcong insurgency was defeated, the Saigon regime gained control of practically the entire rural population, and the South Vietnamese armed forces became capable of standing on their own.
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