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An army, Lewis Mumford once observed, 'is a body of pure consumers'
and it is logistics that feeds this body's insatiable appetite for
men and materiel. Successful logistics - the transportation of
supplies and combatants to battle - cannot guarantee victory, but
poor logistics portends defeat. In Feeding Victory, Jobie Turner
asks how technical innovation has affected this connection over
time and whether advances in technology, from the railroad and the
airplane to the nuclear weapon and the computer, have altered both
the critical relationship between logistics and warfare and,
ultimately, geopolitical dynamics. Covering a span of three hundred
years, Feeding Victory focuses on five distinct periods of
technological change, from the preindustrial era to the information
age. For each era Turner presents a case study: the campaign for
Lake George from 1755 to 1759, the Western Front in 1917, the
Battle of Guadalcanal in 1942, the Battle of Stalingrad from 1942
to 1943, and the Battle of Khe Sanh in 1968. In each of these cases
the logistics of the belligerents were at their limit because of
geography or the vast material needs of war. With such limits, the
case studies both give a clear accounting of the logistics of the
period, particularly with respect to the mode of transportation -
whether air, land, or sea - and reveal the inflection points
between success and failure. What are the continuities between
eras, Turner asks, and what can these campaigns tell us about the
relationship of technology to logistics and logistics to
geopolitics? In doing so, Turner discovers just how critical the
biological needs of the soldiers on the battlefield prove to be; in
fact, they overwhelm firepower in their importance, even in the
modern era. His work shows how logistics aptly represents
technological shifts from the enlightenment to the dawn of the
twenty-first century and how, in our time, ideas have come to trump
the material forces of war.
An army, Lewis Mumford once observed, "is a body of pure
consumers"-and it is logistics that feeds this body's insatiable
appetite for men and materiel. Successful logistics-the
transportation of supplies and combatants to battle-cannot
guarantee victory, but poor logistics portends defeat. In Feeding
Victory, Jobie Turner asks how technical innovation has affected
this connection over time and whether advances in technology, from
the railroad and the airplane to the nuclear weapon and the
computer, have altered both the critical relationship between
logistics and warfare and, ultimately, geopolitical
dynamics.Covering a span of three hundred years, Feeding Victory
focuses on five distinct periods of technological change, from the
preindustrial era to the information age. For each era Turner
presents a case study: the campaign for Lake George from 1755 to
1759, the Western Front in 1917, the Battle of Guadalcanal in 1942,
the Battle of Stalingrad from 1942 to 1943, and the Battle of Khe
Sanh in 1968. In each of these cases the logistics of the
belligerents were at their limit because of geography or the vast
material needs of war. With such limits, the case studies both give
a clear accounting of the logistics of the period, particularly
with respect to the mode of transportation-whether air, land, or
sea-and reveal the inflection points between success and failure.
What are the continuities between eras, Turner asks, and what can
these campaigns tell us about the relationship of technology to
logistics and logistics to geopolitics? In doing so, Turner
discovers just how critical the biological needs of the soldiers on
the battlefield prove to be; in fact, they overwhelm firepower in
their importance, even in the modern era. His work shows how
logistics aptly represents technological shifts from the
enlightenment to the dawn of the twentyfirst century and how, in
our time, ideas have come to trump the material forces of war.
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