The Iraq Wars and America’s Military Revolution traces changes in the methods of applying force and the means with which the US military has applied that force since the end of the ColdWar.The book traces this progression through the conceptual lens of the so-called Revolution in Military Affairs (RMA), and contemporary RMA debate
As a range of new and fantastic allied weapons systems descended upon Iraq’s desert terrain in 1991 ...
The current Revolution in Military Affairs (RMA) is taking place against the background of a larger ...
Book review: From soldiers to citizens: Demilitarization of conflict and societyJoão Gomes Porto, Ch...
A book review of Fiasco: The American Military Adventure in Iraq (2006) by Thomas E. Ricks
McManus (Missouri Univ. of Science and Technology and historian for the US Army 7th Infantry) convin...
The author provides a critical audit of the great RMA debate and of some actual RMA behavior and war...
Over the past five years, US military forces have fought in three major conflicts – Kosovo, Afghanis...
Review of Peter L. Hahn. Missions Accomplished? The United States and Iraq since World War I. Oxford...
In Going to War in Iraq: When Citizens and the Press Matter, Stanley Feldman, Leonie Huddy and Georg...
This article reviews the book 'Red star over Iraq: Iraqi Communism before Saddam', by Johan Franzén
This review discusses Ann Hagedorn\u27s book, which addresses the post-millennial proliferation of a...
Book review: Women in the Military: an unfinished revolution. By Jeanne Holm. Novato, Calif.: Presid...
Review of the book: Aspden, Rachel Generation Revolution: On the Front Line Between Tradition an...
A review of The Iraq War and International Law edited by Phil Shiner and Andrew Williams. Oxford, Ha...
The mutual contempt that the military and the media have for each other would always make for intere...
As a range of new and fantastic allied weapons systems descended upon Iraq’s desert terrain in 1991 ...
The current Revolution in Military Affairs (RMA) is taking place against the background of a larger ...
Book review: From soldiers to citizens: Demilitarization of conflict and societyJoão Gomes Porto, Ch...
A book review of Fiasco: The American Military Adventure in Iraq (2006) by Thomas E. Ricks
McManus (Missouri Univ. of Science and Technology and historian for the US Army 7th Infantry) convin...
The author provides a critical audit of the great RMA debate and of some actual RMA behavior and war...
Over the past five years, US military forces have fought in three major conflicts – Kosovo, Afghanis...
Review of Peter L. Hahn. Missions Accomplished? The United States and Iraq since World War I. Oxford...
In Going to War in Iraq: When Citizens and the Press Matter, Stanley Feldman, Leonie Huddy and Georg...
This article reviews the book 'Red star over Iraq: Iraqi Communism before Saddam', by Johan Franzén
This review discusses Ann Hagedorn\u27s book, which addresses the post-millennial proliferation of a...
Book review: Women in the Military: an unfinished revolution. By Jeanne Holm. Novato, Calif.: Presid...
Review of the book: Aspden, Rachel Generation Revolution: On the Front Line Between Tradition an...
A review of The Iraq War and International Law edited by Phil Shiner and Andrew Williams. Oxford, Ha...
The mutual contempt that the military and the media have for each other would always make for intere...
As a range of new and fantastic allied weapons systems descended upon Iraq’s desert terrain in 1991 ...
The current Revolution in Military Affairs (RMA) is taking place against the background of a larger ...
Book review: From soldiers to citizens: Demilitarization of conflict and societyJoão Gomes Porto, Ch...