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War's Logic: Strategic Thought and the American Way of War (Cambridge Military Histories)

✍ Scribed by Antulio J. Echevarria II


Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Year
2021
Tongue
English
Leaves
309
Edition
New
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


Antulio J. Echevarria II reveals how successive generations of American strategic theorists have thought about war. Analyzing the work of Alfred Thayer Mahan, Billy Mitchell, Bernard Brodie, Robert Osgood, Thomas Schelling, Herman Kahn, Henry Eccles, Joseph Wiley, Harry Summers, John Boyd, William Lind, and John Warden, he uncovers the logic that underpinned each theorist's critical concepts, core principles, and basic assumptions about the nature and character of war. In so doing, he identifies four paradigms of war's nature - traditional, modern, political, and materialist - that have shaped American strategic thought. If war's logic is political, as Carl von Clausewitz said, then so too is thinking about war.

✦ Table of Contents


Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part I First Principles and Modern War
1 Alfred Thayer Mahan and Sea Power
2 Billy Mitchell and Air Power
Part II The Revolt of the Strategy Intellectuals
3 Bernard Brodie, Robert Osgood, and Limited War
4 Thomas Schelling and War as Bargaining and Coercion
5 Herman Kahn and Escalation
Part III The Counterrevolution of the Military Intellectuals
6 Henry Eccles and the Reform of Strategic Theory
7 J. C. Wylie and Strategy as Control
8 Harry Summers and the Principles of War
Part IV The Insurrection of the Operational Artists
9 John Boyd, William Lind, and Maneuver Theory
10 John Warden and Air Operational Art
Conclusion
Notes
Select Bibliography
Index


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