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After the Persian Gulf War of 1991, the Department of Defense
presented the United States Congress with an official, joint
account of Desert Storm. At the same time, each of the military
services offered its own version of events to the American people
through official histories and in collaboration with non-military
authors. While these histories all described the same war, however,
they frequently contradicted one another regarding the
contributions of the various services to the defeat of the Iraqi
Army. Drawing from the theory of organizational politics, this
study examines the use of history by the American armed forces
during three distinct periods: the defense reorganization of the
late 1940s, the Reagan military buildup of the 1980s, and in the
years following the decisive American-led victory in Desert Storm.
It shows how the services have increasingly considered history as
an effective way to shape perceptions of their past accomplishments
and influence future decisions regarding roles, missions, and
budgets.
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