
Another volume in Praeger's The Military Profession series, this revised edition of the 1984 Praeger classic tells the story of infantry in the 20th century and its impact on the major conflicts of our time. Its purpose is to provide the reader--whether infantryman or not--with hitherto unavailable insights on the role that infantry plays in the larger battle and how that has helped shape the world that we live in today. Unique aspects of the book include the treatment of technical issues in non-technical language, the extensive use of German and French sources generally unavailable to the English-speaking reader, and the shattering of some long-cherished myths. Combat motivation and combat refusal, the role played by small units (such as the squad and fire team), the role of infantry in the Blitzkrieg, and many other issues often papered over in the literature of infantry are discussed and analyzed in detail in this revised edition.
This work investigates the evolution of infantry tactics and their decisive influence on the outcome of major 20th-century conflicts. John A. English, a military historian, utilizes a comparative analysis of international military archives to challenge conventional narratives regarding infantry effectiveness. The text argues that the success of modern warfare is fundamentally tied to the operational performance of small units rather than purely technological superiority.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this text as a significant contribution to military history for its synthesis of non-English primary sources. Readers frequently note the accessibility of the prose despite the technical nature of the subject matter.
Page Count:
264
Publication Date:
1984-01-01
Publisher:
Praeger
ISBN-10:
0030014093
ISBN-13:
9780030014093
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!