Winston Churchill once said that most strategic failures in war are due to the “total absence of one directing mind and commanding willpower.” During World War II, Churchill was determined to be that one directing mind, taking for himself a new cabinet portfolio for defense as well as the office of prime min- ister. Difficult as it may be to resist the ideas of one of the greatest leaders of the twentieth century, there are many today who will be skeptical of such a claim
Explanations of the importance of Allied air power during World War II often look to the supporting ...
This volume is largely successful not only in emphasizing the continuity and wisdom of Colin Gray’s ...
British defence and security policy has recently come under attack for lacking strategic vision. In ...
“The principle of aiming everything at the enemy’s center of gravity admits of only one exception—th...
What essential leadership lessons do we learn by distilling the actions and ideas of great military ...
Trust in political leaders has always been somewhat tenuous. Leaders are, in the normal run of thing...
One of three volumes of essays (two fo- cus on different aspects of strategy) pub- lished in Handel’...
Winston Churchill is, rightly, hailed as a great war-leader. In 1940, when the German armies were al...
A vigorous, gifted orator, Winston Churchill did much to raise morale in his role as British wartime...
BELL Christopher M. Churchill & sea power Oxford : Oxford University press, 2013, XVI-429 p.-[16] p....
No one worked harder on his own image than Bernard Montgomery, but he is rightly ranked among the m...
In late 1944, two legendary generals stood at the helm of the Allied Expeditionary Force as it plung...
The author takes a look at the interplay between leadership and the American military. The author ex...
The Phoney War is a comparatively neglected period in studies of Churchill and war. Yet, this was a ...
History may be written by the victors, but war is not a solo act. Yet the narrative surrounding the ...
Explanations of the importance of Allied air power during World War II often look to the supporting ...
This volume is largely successful not only in emphasizing the continuity and wisdom of Colin Gray’s ...
British defence and security policy has recently come under attack for lacking strategic vision. In ...
“The principle of aiming everything at the enemy’s center of gravity admits of only one exception—th...
What essential leadership lessons do we learn by distilling the actions and ideas of great military ...
Trust in political leaders has always been somewhat tenuous. Leaders are, in the normal run of thing...
One of three volumes of essays (two fo- cus on different aspects of strategy) pub- lished in Handel’...
Winston Churchill is, rightly, hailed as a great war-leader. In 1940, when the German armies were al...
A vigorous, gifted orator, Winston Churchill did much to raise morale in his role as British wartime...
BELL Christopher M. Churchill & sea power Oxford : Oxford University press, 2013, XVI-429 p.-[16] p....
No one worked harder on his own image than Bernard Montgomery, but he is rightly ranked among the m...
In late 1944, two legendary generals stood at the helm of the Allied Expeditionary Force as it plung...
The author takes a look at the interplay between leadership and the American military. The author ex...
The Phoney War is a comparatively neglected period in studies of Churchill and war. Yet, this was a ...
History may be written by the victors, but war is not a solo act. Yet the narrative surrounding the ...
Explanations of the importance of Allied air power during World War II often look to the supporting ...
This volume is largely successful not only in emphasizing the continuity and wisdom of Colin Gray’s ...
British defence and security policy has recently come under attack for lacking strategic vision. In ...