Real soldiering : the US Army in the aftermath of war, 1815-1980 /

"In Real Soldiering, Brian Linn demonstrates that each conflict has produced a distinct aftermath army that shares many characteristics with its predecessors. These aftermath armies follow similar patterns of creation and evolution. In the first three to four years after the termination of host...

Disgrifiad llawn

Manylion Llyfryddiaeth
Prif Awdur: Linn, Brian McAllister (Awdur)
Fformat: Licensed eBooks
Iaith:Saesneg
Cyhoeddwyd: Lawrence, Kansas : University Press of Kansas, [2023]
Cyfres:Modern war studies.
Mynediad Ar-lein:https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=3610737
Disgrifiad
Crynodeb:"In Real Soldiering, Brian Linn demonstrates that each conflict has produced a distinct aftermath army that shares many characteristics with its predecessors. These aftermath armies follow similar patterns of creation and evolution. In the first three to four years after the termination of hostilities, political and military policymakers reform the service based on the perceived lessons of the last conflict. All too often the army, and its historians, have assumed these initial high-level directives, particularly in easily identifiable issues such as doctrine or organization, were soon implemented in the field. But it takes much longer for many of these changes to percolate down to the rank and file. Some never do. For a variety of reasons, among them that politicians seldom fund the changes they impose, organizational inertia, personnel turbulence, and institutional resistance, the aftermath army a decade after a conflict seldom resembles what its creators envisioned"--
Disgrifiad Corfforoll:1 online resource (xx, 300 pages).
Llyfryddiaeth:Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:9780700634767
0700634762
9780700634750