Political and Military Leadership in the World Wars: The Closest Concert
In: Routledge Studies in Modern History Ser v.78
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In: Routledge Studies in Modern History Ser v.78
In: Routledge studies in modern history, 78
"This book approaches the World Wars and the decades between them as a single unit in modern history. It is impossible to understand either the cause or conduct of the 1939-45 war without an appreciation of the issues not wholly answered in the conflict of 1914-18. Bridging the World Wars was the establishment, revision, and ultimate collapse of the Versailles settlement and the League of Nations system between 1919 and 1939. The 1919 settlement was contested in the 1920s by Fascist Italy and began to unravel irreparably in 1931 with Japan's incursion into Manchuria. The strategic thought of the interwar years is therefore especially instructive in assessing the prosecution of WWII, as the military ventures of these two revisionist powers pointed toward future developments even before Germany thrust a new way of war upon Eastern and Western Europe. Meanwhile, Britain, France, and the United States began an incremental conversion to new approaches to war in the air and on the sea in particular. The interwar decades are best understood as a period of calibrated rearmament by all the powers based on assumptions about the probability of a future war and the nature of its prosecution"--
In: Warfare, society and culture Volume 13
1. Napoleonic warfare -- 2. Far-distant aggression : Anglo-French expeditionary warfare -- 3. Second Republic, Second Reich : American and Prussian wars of national unity -- 4. America, Japan, and the new navalism -- 5. Militarism and the modern state, 1890-1914.
In: Warfare, society and culture, 13
This book is a comparative study of military operations conducted my modern states between the French Revolution and World War I. It examines the complex relationship between political purpose and strategy on the one hand, and the challenge of realizing strategic goals through military operations on the other. It argues further that following the experience of the Napoleonic Wars military strength was awarded a primary status in determining the comparative modernity of all the Great Powers; that military goals came progressively to distort a sober understanding of the national interest; that a genuinely political and diplomatic understanding of national strategy was lost; and that these developments collectively rendered the military and political catastrophe of 1914 not inevitable yet probable.
In: Prentice Hall studies in international relations
In: Humanistic perspectives on international relations
In: Humanistic perspectives on international relations
NATO's military interventions in the Balkans have transformed the alliance. As the alliance goes East, its members are compelled to rethink NATO's, and each member nation's, military and political roles. Providing a well-rounded study of continuing change in the contemporary North Atlantic Treaty Organization, this book is constructed around eight essays by European security experts analyzing challenges confronting the Atlantic Alliance as a military alliance and as a collective security organization dealing simultaneously with deterrence, enlargement, and regional crisis intervention. It is i.
In: Garland reference library of social science v. 1154
In: Contemporary issues in European politics v. 4
In: Contemporary Issues in European Politics Ser.
In: Garland reference library of social science, Volume 1154.
In: Garland reference library of social science, v. 1154
Redefining European Securityis a collection of essays concerned with changing perspectives on peace and political stability in Europe since the end of the Cold War, in both the "hard" security terms of military capacity and readiness and in the realm of "soft" security concerns of economic stability and democratic reform. European governments, the European Union, and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization are dealing with the fundamental problem of determining the very parameters of Europe, politically, economically, and institutionally. This book defines security as the efforts undertaken by national governments and multilateral institutions, beginning with the end of the Cold War and the reunification of Germany, to continue to protect European populations from acts of war and politically-motivated violence in light of the dissolution of the imminent political threat posed to Western Europe by the Soviet Union, 1945-1991 Together these essays assess the progress made in Europe towardpreventing conflict, as well as in ending conflict when it occurs, after the abrupt passing of a situation in which the source and nature of a conflict were highly predictable and the emergence of new circumstances in which potential security threats are multiple, variable, and difficult to measure. Contemporary Europe is a mixture of old and new, of arrested and accelerated history. Europe's governments and institutions have been only partly successful in meeting new security challenges, to a high degree because of failing unity and political will. "Yesterday, Europe only just avoided perishing from imperial follies and frenzied ideologies," wrote the late Raymond Aron in 1976, "she could perish tomorrow through historical abdication."
In: Naval War College review, Band 68, Heft 1, S. 119
ISSN: 0028-1484
In: Journal of transatlantic studies: the official publication of the Transatlantic Studies Association (TSA), Band 12, Heft 3, S. 304-323
ISSN: 1754-1018
In: Orbis: FPRI's journal of world affairs, Band 58, Heft 3, S. 392-412
ISSN: 0030-4387
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