Military Blunders

eBook, 416 pages

English language

Published by Little, Brown Book Group.

ISBN:
978-1-78033-861-3
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1 star (1 review)

Retelling the most spectacular cock-ups in military history, this graphic account has a great deal to say about the psychology of military incompetence and the reasons even the most well-oiled military machines inflict disaster upon themselves. Beginning in AD9 with the massacre of Varus and his legions in the Black Forest all the way up to present day conflict in Afghanistan it analyses why things go wrong on the battlefield and who is to blame.

1 edition

A deeply disappointing book

1 star

Why this ever was bestseller is beyond me. David, cribbing more or less wholesale from his sources, never manages to go beyond rehashes of conventional takes on military events – outdated ones at that, judging from the cases where I am more familiar with current academic discourse (Teutoburger Wald, Crécy, Caporetto). The promised analysis of causes and patterns never materialises, a handful of throwaway sentences after rambling retellings a poor excuse for them. A few infuriatingly superficial remarks hint at more, but never lead anywhere (as an example, David mentions in his chapter on Bannockburn that Edward I. successfully repressed the Scots with combined arms, something his son did not even try. Exploring how this came about – effectively, why medieval armies lacked institutional learning – could be a fascinating topic, even if done superficially, but David fails to follow up). Add some truly ghastly “Old White Dude” missteps and …

Subjects

  • Military history
  • Military art and science

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