Skip to main content (Press Enter).
Toggle navigation
US Army War College - Publications
US Army War College - Publications
Search Army War College - Publications:
Search
Search
Search Army War College - Publications:
Search
Home
Regional Issues
Western Hemisphere
Europe & Russia
Middle East & North Africa
Central Asia & Caucasus
Sub-Saharan Africa
Asia Pacific
Strategic Issues
School of Strategic Landpower
Homeland Security & Defense
Era of Persistent Conflict
Military Leadership
Military Change/Transformation
Landpower & Sustainment
Strategy & Policy
Center for Strategic Leadership
Collins Center Update
Issue Papers
Studies
Futures Seminar
Collections
PKSOI
PKSOI Papers
PKSOI Journal
Recent Articles
Army Heritage and Education Center
About Us
Contributors
USAWC Press
Parameters
Parameters Bookshelf
Podcasts
Press Collections
Archive
Army War College Review
The Carlisle Compendia
Colloquium Briefs
Letort Papers
Op-Eds
Practitioner's Corner
Articles
Books
Conference Papers
IRPs
Monographs
Strategic Estimate
For Authors
Press Tips
Publishing Guide
Home
:
News
1
...
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
...
19
Book Review: Violence in Defeat: The Wehrmacht on German Soil, 1944–1945
February 22, 2024
— Military History | Author: Bastiaan Willems | Reviewed by Lieutenant Colonel Daniel Gipper, US Air Force, faculty development scholar, Air University | Through an analysis of the German Wehrmacht's "barbarization" toward the end of World War II, Violence in Defeat provides a useful and cautionary case study on military effectiveness, distinction,...
MORE
Book Review: The Islamic State in Afghanistan and Pakistan: Strategic Alliances and Rivalries
February 22, 2024
— Counterterrorism | Author: Amira Jadoon with Andrew Mines | Thomas F. Lynch III, PhD, Distinguished Research Fellow, Institute of National Strategic Studies, National Defense University | Professor and historian Dean Nowowiejski presents a thoughtful review of historian Tyler R. Bamford’s study on the “long-term impact of the interwar...
MORE
Book Review: Waging a Good War: How the Civil Rights Movement Won Its Battles, 1954–1968
February 22, 2024
— Leadership | Author: Thomas E. Ricks| Reviewed by Keith Nightingale, retired colonel, US Army | Pulitzer Prize winner Thomas E. Ricks frames the American civil rights movement in terms of a (nonviolent) war, examining the leadership, strategy, and tactics required for success. Ricks also discusses the postwar-like effects the movement had on its...
MORE
Book Review: Small Armies, Big Cities: Rethinking Urban Warfare
February 22, 2024
— Dr. John P. Sullivan gives an overview of Louise A. Tumchewics's anthology on the "persistent challenge" of urban warfare and highlights the work's strongest chapters and their value to "commanders and planners of future urban operations." Sullivan mentions chapter author Patrick Finnegan's discussion of "liminality" as particularly valuable and also calls John Spencer's siege discussion "one of the book's core contributions."...
MORE
International Competition in the High North: Kingston Conference on International Security 2022
January 24, 2024
— Climate change has expanded commercial opportunities in the High North. The Russian attack on Ukraine has weakened the Arctic Council, thus setting the stage for great-power competition in the Arctic. This presents several dilemmas to the Arctic Nations, and especially the indigenous populations who live in the region...
MORE
Book Review: Forging the Anglo-American Alliance: The British and American Armies, 1917–1941
January 17, 2024
— Professor and historian Dean Nowowiejski presents a thoughtful review of historian Tyler R. Bamford’s study on the “long-term impact of the interwar relationship between army officers” of the United States and Great Britain, which “endured despite tensions” and “despite the absence of guidance and in advance of the political approval that would later lead to the formal alliance.” Nowowiejski highlights Bamford’s emphasis on military exchanges, mechanization, military attachés, and intelligence sharing and notes the refreshing significance of the book’s focus on army—rather than navy or executive-level—relationships, which makes this title of particular value...
MORE
Book Review: Boots and Suits: Historical Cases and Contemporary Lessons in Military Diplomacy
January 17, 2024
— Historian and professor Kenneth Weisbrode reviews retired US ambassador Philip S. Kosnett’s anthology on “just how contested, and how significant,” military diplomacy is. After highlighting the value of General Kenneth F. McKenzie’s (US Marine Corps, retired) instructive foreword, which defines military diplomacy, Weisbrode outlines the book’s range of case studies across history (from the Confederacy to Afghanistan), author perspectives (“academics and government officials”), and subject matter (“strategy, operations, and tactics”). He distills some of the book’s essential policy lessons for readers and notes the book’s wide-ranging utility for “teachers, students, and aspiring (or even veteran) military diplomats.”...
MORE
Deterrence Gap: Avoiding War in the Taiwan Strait
January 5, 2024
— The various deterrents that used to discourage Beijing from invading Taiwan have decayed, and at the same time China’s leaders face fewer restraints than ever before. Even so, if interlocking deterrents can be developed for the short, medium, and long terms, and peace reinvigorated, war may yet be avoided...
MORE
Book Review: Military Dogs of World War II
December 20, 2023
— Author: Susan Bulanda | Reviewed by Reverend Dr. Wylie W. Johnson, chaplain (retired), US Army War College class of 2010 |In total war, the nation calls on everyone to direct all resources toward victory—during World War II, that call extended to man’s best friend. Retired military chaplain Dr. Wylie W. Johnson reviews certified animal behavior...
MORE
Book Review: Number One Realist: Bernard Fall and Vietnamese Revolutionary Warfare
December 20, 2023
— Author: Nathaniel L. Moir | Reviewed by John A. Nagl, professor of warfighting studies, US Army War College | Counterinsurgency expert John A. Nagl reviews the “long-overdue” biography of the American political scientist Bernard Fall who, as Nagl writes, was “always a couple years ahead of informed US public opinion” about the Vietnam War. Author...
MORE
1
...
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
...
19