One of three volumes of essays (two fo- cus on different aspects of strategy) pub- lished in Handel’s memory, this work is based on a conference held in Newport, Rhode Island. It offers four scholarly pa- pers on Churchill’s assessment of the German naval challenge before the First World War, Pacific security and the lim- its of British power between the wars, Churchill and the German threat in the late 1930s, and Churchill’s views of tech- nology. Each assesses a different aspect of Churchill’s changing role
To call the struggle against terrorism “America’s War,” perhaps even a war at all, is to miss its fu...
Recently declassified British records reveal London’s misgivings about America’s 1987 reflagging and...
Rumsfeld’s War is a close-up look at one of the most influential figures in the Bush administration,...
“The principle of aiming everything at the enemy’s center of gravity admits of only one exception—th...
The essays in this collection were writ- ten for an international conference held in honor of the la...
Winston Churchill once said that most strategic failures in war are due to the “total absence of one...
The Phoney War is a comparatively neglected period in studies of Churchill and war. Yet, this was a ...
This volume is largely successful not only in emphasizing the continuity and wisdom of Colin Gray’s ...
Preemption and preventive war have a mixed history in terms of moral acceptance. The strongest conde...
The literature shows that naval diplomacy has been used since man first put to sea in ships and that...
Colin Gray’s highly engaging book ad- dresses a spectrum of national security considerations that ar...
There is a powerful undercurrent of thought throughout our defense establish- ment that doubts the v...
In the years following the Second World War an economically exhausted United Kingdom struggled to ma...
It would in any case have been desirable to review the transatlantic relationship more than a decade...
The latest volume of the Britannia Naval Histories of World War II revisits the Royal Navy’s officia...
To call the struggle against terrorism “America’s War,” perhaps even a war at all, is to miss its fu...
Recently declassified British records reveal London’s misgivings about America’s 1987 reflagging and...
Rumsfeld’s War is a close-up look at one of the most influential figures in the Bush administration,...
“The principle of aiming everything at the enemy’s center of gravity admits of only one exception—th...
The essays in this collection were writ- ten for an international conference held in honor of the la...
Winston Churchill once said that most strategic failures in war are due to the “total absence of one...
The Phoney War is a comparatively neglected period in studies of Churchill and war. Yet, this was a ...
This volume is largely successful not only in emphasizing the continuity and wisdom of Colin Gray’s ...
Preemption and preventive war have a mixed history in terms of moral acceptance. The strongest conde...
The literature shows that naval diplomacy has been used since man first put to sea in ships and that...
Colin Gray’s highly engaging book ad- dresses a spectrum of national security considerations that ar...
There is a powerful undercurrent of thought throughout our defense establish- ment that doubts the v...
In the years following the Second World War an economically exhausted United Kingdom struggled to ma...
It would in any case have been desirable to review the transatlantic relationship more than a decade...
The latest volume of the Britannia Naval Histories of World War II revisits the Royal Navy’s officia...
To call the struggle against terrorism “America’s War,” perhaps even a war at all, is to miss its fu...
Recently declassified British records reveal London’s misgivings about America’s 1987 reflagging and...
Rumsfeld’s War is a close-up look at one of the most influential figures in the Bush administration,...