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A Masterpiece of Counterguerrilla Warfare - BG J. Franklin Bell in the Philippines, 1901-1902: The Long War Series Occasional Paper 25 (Paperback)
Loot Price: R440
Discovery Miles 4 400
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A Masterpiece of Counterguerrilla Warfare - BG J. Franklin Bell in the Philippines, 1901-1902: The Long War Series Occasional Paper 25 (Paperback)
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Loot Price R440
Discovery Miles 4 400
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Combat Studies Institute (CSI) presents Long War Series
Occupational Paper (OP) 25, "A Masterpiece of Counterguerrilla
Warfare: BG J. Franklin Bell in the Philippines, 1901-1902, by
Robert Ramsey. OP 25 is a companion to OP 24, "Savage Wars of
Peace: Case Studies of Pacification in the Philippines, 1900-1902.
IN OP 24 Ramsey analyzed case studies from two different Philippine
military districts discovering several themes relevant to today's
ongoing operations in the Long War. IN OP 25 he focuses on the
philosophy that guided Bell in the conduct of one of those
campaigns. Over the ages military historians have employed many
types of research and writing to understand, and ultimately learn
from, the past. These methods range from studies of grand strategy
to studies of small unit tactics to, most recently, studies of the
history of war and society. OP 25 takes a different approach, one
whose origins are old and rather infrequently practiced today. This
technique examines the inner thinking of a commander in an attempt
to understand how he viewed the operation he was conducting. In
reading Bell's words today, it becomes clear he displayed at least
two of the key attributes that constitute Clausewitz's concept of
military genius - the inner light or vision that points a commander
toward victory in the fog of war and the determination to act
decisively in the fact of danger. Mr. Ramsey, in his introduction,
makes note of British Field Marshal Sir Archibald P. Wavell's
endorsement of this kind of history: "The real way to get value out
of the study of military history is to take particular situations,
and as far as possible get inside the skin of the man who made a
decision, realize the conditions in which the decision was made,
and then see in what way you could have improved upon it." This
quote captures the intent of this study. The collected messages and
circulars issued by Bell to his subordinate commanders, and the
text of the US Army's famous General Orders 100 from which he drew
that guidance, provide the means to accomplish what Clausewitz and
Wavell urged us to do.
General
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