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Airpower and the Cult of the Offensive - A CADRE Paper (Paperback)
Loot Price: R421
Discovery Miles 4 210
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Airpower and the Cult of the Offensive - A CADRE Paper (Paperback)
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Loot Price R421
Discovery Miles 4 210
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Dogmatic belief in the dominance of the land offensive influenced
decisions that resulted in years of futile bloodletting on the
Western Front in World War I. Termed "the cult of the offensive" by
scholars of the Great War, faith in the offense became so
unshakable in pre-1914 Europe that military organizations dismissed
irrelevant numerous indications of its waning power in the face of
technological developments favoring the defense. As we know, the
belief that airpower is inherently offensive is a recurrent theme
in airpower history and doctrine. Given the predilections of airmen
for offensive operations, could a cult of the offensive
perniciously trap airpower doctrine and lead to similarly
disastrous consequences? By drawing on selected historical
experiences of the air forces of Great Britain, Israel, and the
United States, Maj. John R. Carter, Jr. employs a comparative
perspective and rigorous case study methodology to offer a detailed
examination of that question. He begins by establishing the
theoretical background necessary for case study analysis. Airpower
defense is defined as those operations conducted to deny another
force's air operations in a designated airspace. Airpower offense
consists of those operations in the airspace defended by another,
or operations conducted outside of one's own actively defended
airspace. Major Carter dissects the relationship between offense
and defense to discover that airpower defense enjoys neither an
advantage of position nor of time. He thus concludes that
traditional Clausewitzian views relative to the power of the
defense do not apply to airpower. The author next describes those
factors that may inject or reinforce a preferential bias for
offense into airpower strategy and doctrine. Major Carter defines a
cult of the offensive as an organizational belief in the power of
the offense so compelling that a military organization no longer
evaluates its offensive doctrine objectively, which leads to his
examination of the ramifications postulated to result from an
offensive ideology. Drawing on the histories of three services -
Great Britain's Royal Air Force from 1918 to 1938, the Israeli Air
Force from 1967 to 1973, and the United States Air Force from 1953
to 1965 - Major Carter offers three case studies to determine if
the cult of the offensive applies to air forces. He concludes that
cults of the offensive have indeed influenced airpower doctrine in
the past, and that detailed offensive planning and a critical
evaluation of capabilities provide two methods for avoid this
potential trap.
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