Journal of Military History
Article Abstracts
Vol. 71, No. 1
January 2007
Articles:
Donald J. Kagay, "The Defense of the Crown of Aragon during
the War of the Two Pedros (1356-1366)," The Journal of
Military History 71#1 (January 2007): 11-36.
- This article focuses on the general strategy of defense developed
by the Aragonese king Pere III during the War of the Two Pedros
(1356-66) between the Crown of Aragon and Castile, headed by
Pedro I "the Cruel." After eight years of fiscal creativity
and defensive luck, Pere retained most of his territory but had
lost some sovereignty to his parliaments. He then went on the
offensive but never effectively defeated Pedro; this was achieved
by his ally Enrique de Trastámara, Pedro's stepbrother.
What the war did accomplish, however, was the establishment of
administrative and military forces that would ultimately lead
toward a Spanish statehood in the fifteenth century.
Gervase Phillips, "Scapegoat Arm: Twentieth-Century Cavalry
in Anglophone Historiography," The Journal of Military
History 71#1 (January 2007): 37-74.
- The cavalry has not been treated kindly by military historians.
Portrayed as an anachronism on the twentieth-century battlefield,
the arm became a convenient scapegoat for failures in war and
the slow pace of modernisation in peacetime. This article traces
the debate over cavalry over the course of the last hundred years,
drawing both on contemporary sources and later historical analysis.
It is suggested that a reassessment of the capabilities of early
twentieth-century soldiers and an interest in the military history
of eastern Europe has led, in turn, to a more positive interpretation
of the cavalry's role in modern warfare.
Stephen Badsey, "The Boer War (1899-1902) and British
Cavalry Doctrine: A Re-Evaluation," The Journal of Military
History 71#1 (January 2007): 75-98.
- Among the important British Army reforms following the Boer
War (1899-1902) was the introduction of a longer-range rifle
for the cavalry instead of a carbine, and a tactical doctrine
including dismounted fire. It remains the view of most historians
that the cavalry learned dismounted tactics from their Boer opponents,
and that postwar reform of the cavalry was imposed from outside.
Senior cavalry officers of the period are viewed as reactionary,
and their performance in the First World War judged accordingly.
This view is based on a partisan interpretation of the Boer War
and the cavalry's role in it, fostered by its contemporary institutional
critics. In fact, a cavalry reform movement was introducing dismounted
tactics before the Boer War, both sides in the war used mounted
and dismounted tactics, and the cavalry's problems were largely
those of supply and not of their own making. This has much wider
implications for the assessment of British military doctrines
up to the end of the First World War.
Jean Bou, "Cavalry, Firepower, and Swords: The Australian
Light Horse and the Tactical Lessons of Cavalry Operations in
Palestine, 1916-1918," The Journal of Military History
71#1 (January 2007): 99-126.
- Despite their frequent description as mounted infantry, more
than half of the Australian Light Horse finished the First World
War as full sword-carrying cavalry, making use of both fire and
modern shock tactics. This change ran counter to the traditions
of the Australian mounted service, which had long emphasised
rifle-based firepower for modern mounted troops. This article
will examine the reasons why such a force adopted the sword in
1918, the nature of the change, and the experiences behind it.
Even in the last year of the First World War, cavalry shock tactics
still had a place on the battlefield.
Alexander M. Bielakowski, "General Hawkins's War: The
Future of the Horse in the U.S. Cavalry," The Journal
of Military History 71#1 (January 2007): 127-138.
- During the interwar period, while some officers supported
mechanization, others, who could accurately be termed "traditionalists",
supported the horse. One of the most prominent of these "traditionalists"
was Brigadier General Hamilton S. Hawkins. Hawkins contended
that mechanized vehicles would never be capable or numerous enough
to completely eliminate the use of horse cavalry. Even as mechanized
forces dominated the battlefield during World War II, Hawkins
continued to write about the need for horse cavalry. Faced with
overwhelming evidence in favor of mechanized vehicles, Hawkins
ultimately demonstrated that his advocacy of the horse was a
matter of faith and not of empirical evidence.
Phillip S. Meilinger, "A History of Effects-Based Air
Operations," The Journal of Military History 71#1
(January 2007): 139-168.
- Effects-Based Operations focus on results achieved from using
military operations-the output. Too often, military commanders
and their staffs concentrate on the means-the inputs-sterile
metrics like body counts, bomb tonnage, or the number of sorties
flown. U.S. airmen have always recognized the inherent logic
and desirability of concentrating on effects, and their doctrine
going into World War II emphasized this focus. Unfortunately,
the intelligence apparatus necessary to analyze a complex enemy
economic system did not then exist. Since then, new technologies
and new analytical tools-which came into their own during the
Persian Gulf War of 1991-have made this decades-old concept a
reality.
David Milne, "'Our equivalent of guerrilla warfare': Walt
Rostow and the Bombing of North Vietnam, 1961-1968," The
Journal of Military History 71#1 (January 2007): 169-204.
- This article examines the contribution that Walt Rostow made
to the shaping of U.S. military strategy during the second Indochina
War. It links Rostow's work as an economic historian with the
advice that he dispensed in the field of strategic bombing. In
1964, Rostow explained to Secretary of State Dean Rusk that "Ho
[Chi Minh] has an industrial complex to protect: he is no longer
a guerrilla fighter with nothing to lose." Rostow's economic
determinism led him to advocate the bombing of North Vietnam
more forcefully than any of his civilian colleagues.
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