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All wars are costly in lives and treasure Through the ages, this
fundamental truth has driven military strategists to search for a
quick and inexpensive victory in battle. But, the limits of
technology allowed for only so much innovation on land and sea.
Then, just as the horrors of war reached their zenith in the
trenches of WWI, the airplane promised to take the battle directly
to the enemy's most vital targets. Victory, some reasoned, would
now go quickly, easily, and with less expense to those who could
command the air. But early Airpower results were not all that
impressive. Airplanes never achieved the unambiguous, inexpensive
or decisive victory its advocates envisioned. Ever since, military
men have sought a better understanding of Airpower and how best to
use this unique weapon to defeat an enemy.
The method or objective of Strategic Paralysis is to selectively
attack or threaten those strategic or national level targets that
most directly support the enemy's war-making efforts and will to
continue with his current behavior. Strategic Paralysis warfare
should result in a change in the enemy's behavior at a lesser cost
to both sides as Airpower assets are the primary weapons --not
ground troops. Why Airpower? It is the only weapon that can provide
the near simultaneous shock to the enemy's central nervous system
necessary to induce paralysis. To achieve success Strategic
Paralysis requires four key ingredients: 1) Correctly identifying
the enemy's National Elements of Value, 2) High technology, 3) An
enemy dependent upon a well developed, modern and vulnerable
infrastructure, and 4) Aerospace Control. The bulk of this study is
devoted to defining this strategy and bettering our understanding
of the first ingredient, that of choosing the best targets for
attack.
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The Seeker (Paperback)
Robert B Barlow Fox
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R500
R427
Discovery Miles 4 270
Save R73 (15%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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The only survivor in a plane crash, a young boy who was
unconsciousness and not discovered by rescue crews, awakens in the
branches of a large pine tree. He has no memory of how he got there
or who he is. In his pocket is a small Bible inscribed "to Jared."
In this mystical story, he then decides to name himself Jared the
Seeker. He soon comes upon a log cabin and meets its strange
occupant and his dog. The strange fellow tells Jared that he is
Elijah the Prophet and they become companions for several months as
Jared experiences many situations and events that can't be
explained rationally. Jared then moves on, driven by an inner
desire to seek the truth about himself. Eventually, as the result
of an accident, he regains his memory and returns home. But there
he is faced with a decision that turns out to be the most difficult
of his life. Robert Barlow Fox gets many ideas for his writing from
his various past experiences. He has BS and MS degrees, has served
in the Navy aboard an aircraft carrier in the Pacific and with the
Army in Europe, and spent three years as a missionary among the
Maori people of New Zealand. He is now a retired educator having
served as teacher, counselor, psychologist, and parole officer.
Robert and his wife have traveled to over fifty countries learning
of the history, culture, and customs of the peoples. He is a member
of the Society of Children's Book Writers and Illustrators and has
published items in many magazines and journals. He likes to write
adventure novels for young adults and family readers. Robert Fox is
also the author of TO BE A WARRIOR, THE BOY WHO HEARS MUSIC, and
INHERITED FAMILY, all from Sunstone Press.
The American horseshoe crab that comes ashore on the East Coast in
vast numbers to mate and nest is much the same creature that
haunted the coast before the time of the dinosaurs. It is among the
world's most intensely studied marine invertebrates, critical to
our understanding of many groups of organisms, both modern and
extinct, and crucial to the ecology of large estuaries such as the
Delaware Bay. Some stocks of this great survivor, whose ancestors
made it through the mass extinction some 286 million years ago,
have been severely depleted today because of overfishing and
habitat destruction.
Carl N. Shuster, Jr., H. Jane Brockmann, and Robert B. Barlow
are at the forefront of research on "Limulus polyphemus," and in
this book they bring together twenty scientists who have worked on
all aspects of horseshoe crab biology to compile the first fully
detailed, comprehensive view of the species. An indispensable
resource, the volume describes the horseshoe crab's behavior,
natural history, and ecology; its anatomy, physiology,
distribution, development, and life cycle; the puzzle of its immune
system; and its present management and future conservation.
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