
Since the Second World War, Arab armed forces have consistently punched below their weight. They have lost many wars that by all rights they should have won, and in their best performances only ever achieved quite modest accomplishments. Over time, soldiers, scholars, and military experts have offered various explanations for this pattern. Reliance on Soviet military methods, the poor civil military relations of the Arab world, the underdevelopment of the Arab states, and patterns of behavior derived from the wider Arab culture, have all been suggested as the ultimate source of Arab military difficulties.Armies of Sand, Kenneth M. Pollack's powerful and riveting history of Arab armies from the end of World War Two to the present, assesses these differing explanations and isolates the most important causes. Over the course of the book, he examines the combat performance of fifteen Arab armies and air forces in virtually every Middle Eastern war, from the Jordanians and Syrians in 1948 to Hizballah in 2006 and the Iraqis and ISIS in 2014 2017. He then compares these experiences to the performance of the Argentine, Chadian, Chinese, Cuban, North Korean, and South Vietnamese armed forces in their own combat operations during the twentieth century. The book ultimately concludes that reliance on Soviet doctrine was more of a help than a hindrance to the Arabs. In contrast, politicization and underdevelopment were both important factors limiting Arab military effectiveness, but patterns of behavior derived from the dominant Arab culture was the most important factor of all. Pollack closes with a discussion of the rapid changes occurring across the Arab world political, economic, and cultural as well as the rapid evolution in war making as a result of the information revolution. He suggests that because both Arab society and warfare are changing, the problems that have bedeviled Arab armed forces in the past could dissipate or even vanish in the future, with potentially dra
This work investigates the persistent pattern of underperformance in Arab military forces since the Second World War to identify the primary drivers of their combat effectiveness. Kenneth M. Pollack, a scholar specializing in Middle Eastern military affairs, utilizes a comparative historical framework to evaluate various theories regarding Arab military failures. By analyzing combat data across multiple decades and comparing these outcomes with non-Arab military forces, he argues that while political and developmental factors play a role, cultural patterns are the most significant determinants of military performance.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts in military history and Middle Eastern security recognize this text as a comprehensive, data-driven examination of a complex geopolitical issue. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the author's rigorous methodology in isolating cultural variables from political ones.
Page Count:
696
Publication Date:
2019-01-15
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190906960
ISBN-13:
9780190906962
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