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Hollow Victory: A Contrary View of the Gulf War


Auteur :
Éditeur : Brassey’s (US) Date & Lieu : 1993, Washington & New York & London
Préface : Pages : 186
Traduction : ISBN : 0-02-881046-5
Langue : AnglaisFormat : 150x215 mm
Code FIKP : Liv. Eng. Rec. Hol. N° 3136Thème : Général

Présentation
Table des Matières Introduction Identité PDF
Hollow Victory: A Contrary View of the Gulf War

Hollow Victory: A Contrary View of the Gulf War

Jeffrey Record

Brassey’s (US)

“A comprehensive and exhaustively documented commentary on important political, military, and strategic questions relating to the Persian Gulf Conflict. This well-written and eminently readable book makes an important contribution to an understanding of that conflict and its aftermath.” -Sen. Sam Nunn

“Sure to stoke the fires of debate on the Gulf War and its broader implications for U.S. foreign policy. Mr. Record is not afraid to draw the controversial conclusions to shed light on a conflict that has thus far not been fully exposed. Hollow Victory is fresh, thought-provoking, and informative. It adds much to the continuing debate on America’s most recent war.” - Sen. William S. Cohen

“A splendid analytical account of the war because he asked all the right questions. Was Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait inevitable? Why didn’t Saddam Hussein duck the most telegraphed punch in recent military history? Did George Bush end the war too soon? Are the lessons of this war applicable to future likely conflicts? Even veteran pundits will learn a great deal from this book. No library on the war will be complete without it.”
- Bob Zelnick
ABC News


Jeffrey Record, a nationally recognized defense thinker, is now a U.S. Senate aide. Over the past twenty years, he has served as legislative assistant to Sen. Sam Nunn, a columnist for the Baltimore Sun, and policy analyst at the Brookings Institution, the Institute for Foreign Policy Analysis, the Hudson Institute, and BDM International. Dr. Record has written hundreds of articles on defense matters and three books published by Brassey’s: Revising U.S. Military Strategy: Tailoring Means to Ends (1984), Determining Future U.S. Tactical Airlift Requirements (1987), and Beyond Military Reform: American Defense Dilemmas (1988). He lives in Arlington, Virginia.




Table des Matières


Contents

1. Looking Back / 1

2. Was War Avoidable? / 15
Iraqi Desperateness / 18
Kuwaiti Recklessness / 21
American Witlessness / 23
Was Desert Storm Inevitable? / 34

3. Sanctions, Force, and War Aims / 43
Baghdad’s Economic Vulnerabilities / 43
Saddam’s Stamina and Time’s Perversity / 46
Competing American Objectives / 50

4. Gauging the Enemy / 57
Prewar Assessments / 57
Cultural Biases / 60
Missing the Worst / 64
Future Iraqs / 68

5. The Strategic and Operational Setting / 71
Iraq’s Isolation / 71
Saudi Arabia’s Logistical Cornucopia / 73
Secure Lines of Communication / 76
Saddam’s Conventionality / 76
Open Country / 77
More and Better Forces / 78
Time / 82
Exchange Rates / 84

6. Saddam as Generalissimo / 87
Iraqi Incompetence and American Unpredictability / 88
Thwarting Desert Storm / 93

7. The Air War / 103
An Airman’s Paradise / 103
Strategic versus Tactical / 106
Targeting the Iraqi Economy / 109
Consequences / 113
The Other Services / 115

8. Of Presidents, Generals, and Service Rivalries / 119
Advice Unsolicited and Given Not / 120
Calling the War Off / 124
Still the Squabbling Services / 128

9. Lessons, Nonlessons, and Others’ Lessons / 133
Lessons Galore / 134
What We Did Not Learn / 136
Lessons Others Can Learn / 147

10. Pyrrhic Triumph / 155

Notes / 161

Selected Bibliography / 173

Index / 179




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