war
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Review: On War – by Carl von Clausewitz

In addition to Sun Tzu’s Art of War, this book authored by Prussian officer Carl von Clausewitz is the quintessential classic book on military theory. The book (although this edition was only an abridged version) puts forward in detail theory for all elements of war, from politics to military leadership, from defence to attack. It… Continue reading
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Review: A Great Perhaps? Colombia: Conflict and Convergence – by Dickie Davis, David Kilcullen, Greg Mills and David Spencer

David Kilcullen has had a few books included on my shelf recently. As a military expert on Guerrilla Warfare, I was thrilled to find this new book on the Colombian Civil War which he coauthors with a group of specialists who went on extensive field research around Colombia, with a view to learning lessons about… Continue reading
Afghanistan, Bogota, COcaine, Colombia, Colombian Civil War, Communism, Communist, Cuba, David Kilcullen, ELN, FARC, FARC-EP, Guerrilla, Havana, jungle, Latin America, Malaya, Manuel Marulanda, Marulanda, militaryt, narcotics, naroctrafficking, paramilitaries, peace, peace talks, PLan Colombia, Revolution, Russia, Soviet Union, USA, war -
Review: The Near East Since The First World War – by M.E.Yapp

This book was written in 1990 and is thus a bit dated. The postscript announces the start of the first Gulf War after the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait. Post World War 1 saw most of the current political boundaries drawn in the Near East or as we now most predominantly label it, the Middle East.… Continue reading
Arab, Arabic, Ayatollah, Ba'ath, Bahrain, Britain, British Empire, colonial, Egypt, empire, France, iran, Iranian Revolution, Iraq, Israel, Israeli, Jew, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, middle east, Near East, notables, oil, Politics, Qatar, religion, Revolution, saudi arabia, Suez, Syria, twentieth century, U.K., UAE, United Arab Emirates, war, World War 1, Yapp, Yemen -
Review: Blood Year – Islamic State and the Failures of the War on Terror – by David Kilcullen

This is the second book that I have read by David Kilcullen. The author is a former Australian soldier and a senior advisor to the US Military in addition to being a leading theorist of modern warfare. This book looks deeply at the fundamental Islamic terrorist state ISIS. ISIS grew out of the ashes of… Continue reading
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Review: Unrestricted Warfare – Wake Up, America! China’s Master Plan to Destroy America

Qiao Liang and Wang Xiangsui are from a new generation of Chinese People’s Liberation Army soldiers. They have mused upon the situation of modern military affairs and developed this theoretical book on war to describe the status quo as it was around the turn of the Millenium. The book is a translation of the original… Continue reading
9/11, alexander the great, AMerica, China, Chinese Army, Chinese Military, clausewitz, Communism, Communist, don quixote, Gulf War, Iraq, king wu, Mandarin Chinese, military strategy, mlitary, modernwarfare, People's Liberation Army, PLA, Qiao Liang, sun tzu, tech, Translation, US Military, USA, Wang Xiangsui, war, War On Terror -
Review: Out of the Mountains – The Coming Age of the Urban Guerrilla – by David Kilcullen

David Kilcullen is an experienced Australian military professional. He is a senior advisor to the US Military. In this book, Kilcullen describes the recent Western conflicts in Afghanistan and Iraq as relative anomalies in the progress of future wars and conflict. He focus on the Urban, networked littoral. Giant coastal slum cities will be the… Continue reading
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Review: Wired for War by P.W.Singer

Although by the time I finally finished reading this book it was perhaps over a decade old and hence due the hi-tech nature of the subject, perhaps dated, I gained a lot of new knowledge about the robotics industry, technological progress in society and in particular, the application of robotics to warfare. Nowadays everybody from… Continue reading
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Review: Atatürk – The Rebirth of a Nation – by Patrick Kinross

Mustafa Kemal Atatürk was from humble beginnings. He lived through a critical period of Turkish history, witnessing the decline and fall of the Ottoman Empire and making it possible for the modern secular, Western-focused nation state of Turkey to phoenix itself from the Ashes. Atatürk was a military man and although very lucky, his innovative… Continue reading
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Review: The Billion Dollar Spy – by David E. Hoffman

This espionage thriller tells the true life story of one of the Cold War’s most valuable assets, a Russian spy working for the CIA in the heart of the Soviet military aerospace sector. Adolf Tolkachev made the first tentative moves to reach out to the Americans in January 1977, in the heart of Moscow. At… Continue reading
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