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Unlike some other reproductions of classic texts (1) We have not
used OCR(Optical Character Recognition), as this leads to bad
quality books with introduced typos. (2) In books where there are
images such as portraits, maps, sketches etc We have endeavoured to
keep the quality of these images, so they represent accurately the
original artefact. Although occasionally there may be certain
imperfections with these old texts, we feel they deserve to be made
available for future generations to enjoy.
The Army Medical Department, 1865-1917, is the third of four
planned volumes that treat the time of revolutionary change in the
organization of the U.S. Army and in medicine. Mary C. Gillett
traces major developments for the Medical Department-from its
rebirth as a small scattered organization in the wake of the Civil
War, through the trials of the Spanish-American War and the
Philippine Insurrection, to the entrance of the United States into
World War I.
United States Army Center of Military History publication, CMH Pub
12-3-1. 2nd edition.Photographs selected and text written by
Kenneth E. Hunter. Mary Ann Bacon, editor. This book deals with the
European Theater of Operations, covering the period from build up
in Britain through V-E Day.
A history of U.S. Army medical activities from the Revolutionary
War to 1818, the year in which congressional legislation instituted
the modern Medical Department.
Reprint of 1970 publication from the US Army Center of Military
History. A description of selected small unit actions, written
primarily to acquaint junior officers, noncommissioned officers,
and enlisted soldiers with combat experiences in Korea.
Full color publication. The Coastal Engineering Manual (CEM)
assembles in a single source the current state-of-the-art in
coastal engineering to provide appropriate guidance for application
of techniques and methods to the solution of most coastal
engineering problems. The CEM provides a standard for the
formulation, design, and expected performance of a broad variety of
coastal projects. These projects are undertaken to provide or
improve navigation at commercial harbors, harbor works for
commercial fish handling and service facilities, and recreational
boating facilities. As an adjunct to navigation improvements, shore
protection projects are often required to mitigate the impacts of
navigation projects. Beach erosion control and hurricane or coastal
storm protection projects provide wave damage reduction and flood
protection to valuable coastal commercial, urban, and tourist
communities. Environmental restoration projects provide a rational
layout and proven approach to restoring the coastal and tidal
environs where such action may be justified, or required as
mitigation to a coastal project's impacts, or as mitigation for the
impact of some previous coastal activity, incident, or neglect. As
the much expanded replacement document for the Shore Protection
Manual (1984) and several other U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
(USACE) manuals, the CEM provides a much broader field of guidance.
With full color photographs and maps. "Humanitarian Intervention"
is an operational study of the U.S.-led relief effort PROVIDE
COMFORT, hastily organized in the spring of 1991 in response to the
international outcry to stop the suffering and dying of the Iraqi
Kurds who had been brutally suppressed in the aftermath of DESERT
STORM and had fled across a mountainous border into Turkey. Gordon
W. Rudd documents and describes this challenging operation
involving joint and multinational forces. His study validates the
capacity of military forces, well trained for war, not only to
adapt quickly for humanitarian relief missions without specialized
preparation but also to work alongside civilian relief agencies
attempting to assist the refugees, requiring significant
cooperation between the two groups. Today the potential of the new
round of military-led peace operations to reduce turmoil and
conflict-and, in effect, contribute to shaping the international
environment-is significant, and soldiers now deployed in distant
lands amidst unfamiliar people in the service of their nation will
find Rudd's instructive perspective and record of the Army's
experience invaluable.
Ebb and Flow records an important chapter in the Korean War, the
period from late November 1950 to early July 1951 when battle lines
did indeed ebb and flow in pronounced surges. Billy C. Mossman
begins with the last weeks of the pell-mell rush of United Nations
forces to the Chinese border and goes on to chronicle in great
detail the test of American military leadership and resources posed
by the taxing retreat of the Eighth Army and X Corps across the
frozen wastes of North Korea. He highlights the limitations imposed
by terrain and weather on the fighting capabilities of an American
army facing surprise attack from a large disciplined enemy. In
addition, the operations he describes in such careful detail vivify
the principles of war for those with an interest in studying the
profession of arms. With color maps, illustrations, bibliographical
note, glossaries, index.
A history of the intricate and frustrating truce negotiations
between the UN forces and the Chinese Communists that continued
from July 1951 until July 1953, of the bitter hill fighting that
continued during those negotiations, and of the large-scale
prisoner riots at Koje-do. With color maps, illustrations,
bibliographical note, glossaries, index.
This groundbreaking work challenges modernist military science and
explores how a more open design epistemology is becoming an
attractive alternative to a military staff culture rooted in a
monistic scientific paradigm. The author offers fresh sociological
avenues to become more institutionally reflexive - to offer a
variety of design frames of reference, beyond those typified by
modern military doctrine. Modernist military knowledge has been
institutionalized to the point that blinds militaries to
alternative designs organizationally and in their interventions.
This book seeks to reconstruct strategy and operations in
"designing ways" and develops theories of action through
multifaceted contextualizations and recontextualizations of
situations, showing that Military Design does not have to rely on
set rational-analytic decision-making schemes, but on seeking
alternative meanings in- and on-action. The work offers an
alternative philosophy of practice that embraces the
unpredictability of tasks to be accomplished. Written by Colonel
Paparone (U.S. Army, Ret., PhD) with a special chapter by two
active duty officers, it will appeal to all in military and
security studies, including professionals and policymakers.
The war in Korea (Chosun) was the first peacekeeping war for the
United Nations (UN). It was brutal and vicious from the start. Gen.
Douglas MacArthur described the first 10 months of the war, when he
was in command, as the most savage fighting he had ever experienced
in his long military career. During this period, the North Korea
People's Army (NKPA, or In Min Gun) gave little quarter to
prisoners, military or civilian, and only one of every three
Americans taken early in the war lived to tell about it.
An account of the first five months of the Korean War, describing
the withdrawal to the Pusan perimeter, MacArthur's landing at
Inch'on and drive northward that crushed the North Koreans, and the
stiffening of enemy resistance as the United Nations forces neared
the Manchurian border. With color maps, illustrations,
bibliographical note, glossaries, index.
A detailed examination of major policy decisions and planning
actions in Washington and Tokyo through June 1951. A broad outline
of combat operations is included to orient the reader. With color
maps, illustrations, bibliographical note, glossaries, index.
LTC (US Army, Retired) Roy Peterson served as an Assistant Army
Attache in Moscow during the peak of the Cold War Years from
1983-1985. American Attache in the Moscow Maelstrom is a carefully
crafted work that opens the window on what it was like to serve
American interests in that intense environment. This book is more
than reminiscences. As a professional intelligence officer, the
author provides instruction on how to conduct overt intelligence
collection, insight into the craft of human intelligence
collection, historical perspectives, and how act as an attache.
Although this is a nonfiction book, parts of it read like a novel.
Roy Peterson is presently (2005) a faculty member of the University
of Phoenix, President of TriCrown International LLC, and Senior
Executive Vice President of Executive Information Systems and
Investment Group. Roy Peterson served in Vladivostok, Russia from
1993-94, as the first U.S. Foreign Commercial Officer in the
Russian Far East for the US Department of Commerce, as a Visa
Issuing Officer for the Department of State, and as the first
Russian Far East Regional Manager for IBM. Roy is a recognized
consultant and educator on international trade, marketing, and
global business strategies.
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