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This volume examines how Imperial Russia's armed forces sought to
adapt to the challenges of modern warfare. Russian rulers always
understood the need to maintain an army and navy capable of
preserving the empire's great power status. Yet they inevitably
faced the dilemma of importing European military and technological
innovations while keeping out political ideas that could challenge
the autocracy's monopoly on power. Reforming the Tsar's Army
touches on many broader issues in politics, international
relations, economy and society, and combines the efforts of leading
specialists of Russian military history from North America, Europe
and Russia to consider many aspects of this dilemma. Grouped around
broad themes of resources, intelligence, personality, and responses
to specific wars, these essays benefit from the new archival
openness to yield some surprising insights into the empire's
willingness and ability to adapt to change.
This volume examines how Imperial Russia's armed forces sought to
adapt to the challenges of modern warfare. Russian rulers always
understood the need to maintain an army and navy capable of
preserving the empire's great power status. Yet they inevitably
faced the dilemma of importing European military and technological
innovations while keeping out political ideas that could challenge
the autocracy's monopoly on power. Reforming the Tsar's Army
touches on many broader issues in politics, international
relations, economy and society, and combines the efforts of leading
specialists of Russian military history from North America, Europe
and Russia to consider many aspects of this dilemma. Grouped around
broad themes of resources, intelligence, personality, and responses
to specific wars, these essays benefit from the new archival
openness to yield some surprising insights into the empire's
willingness and ability to adapt to change.
One can argue that the development of true doctrine required the
formal adoption of the concept of operational art. Prior to the
Great War, no army in the world possessed a codified body of
thought that enabled senior military commanders to visualize the
aggregate effects of tactical engagements across time and space. By
1918, after a dramatic revision of drill regulations into something
approaching true doctrine, the German army was furthest in
realizing this goal. Ultimately, though, the Germans could not
translate tactical success into strategic victory because they
could not resource military operations in sufficient depth to
render local successes decisive. Understanding that the character
of warfare in 1918 was radically different from 1914 would have
enabled Ludendorff to see the flaws in the MICHAEL offensives and
perhaps mitigate them. And although the interwar German Army spent
a great deal of effort reflecting on the lessons of 1914-1918,
German understanding of the operational art remained incomplete.
The separate and unequal Allied efforts against Nazi Germany in
World War II, followed immediately by the superpower competition of
the Cold War, created a significant gap in American officers'
understand ing of the factors that contributed to Soviet victories
on the Eastern Front. As a result, in the decades following the war
the concept of "operational art" was recognized and adopted by the
US Army almost as a proprietary creation. In the 1990s, however,
Western military historians and theorists discovered that the
Soviets had gotten there first. Bruce Menning's translation of
Georgii Samoilovich Isserson's 1936 treatise The Evolution of
Operational Art is the best example available of the distillation
of Soviet military thought before the Second World War. Isserson,
Tukhachevsky, Shaposhnikov, and others like them were founding
members of a focused military Enlightenment whose goal was to
change the way armies and leaders thought about war. Moreover,
unlike contemporaries such as B.H. Liddell Hart or Billy Mitchell,
they had the opportunity to build their ideas into the modem Soviet
Army and see their doctrine survive despite the existential
challenges of Stalin's purges and the German invasion.
From the foreword: "Bruce Menning's translation of Georgii
Samoilovich Isserson's 1936 treatise The Evolution of Operational
Art is the best example available of the distillation of Soviet
military thought before the Second World War. Isserson,
Tukhachevsky, Shaposhnikov, and others like them were founding
members of a focused military Enlightenment whose goal was to
change the way armies and leaders thought about war. Moreover,
unlike contemporaries such as B.H. Liddell Hart or Billy Mitchell,
they had the opportunity to build their ideas into the modern
Soviet Army and see their doctrine survive despite the existential
challenges of Stalin's purges and the German invasion. I commend
this work to you as a foundational text, one to which I hope you
will refer repeatedly throughout your career."
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