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The Casualty Issue in American Military Practice Evan A. Huelfer

The Casualty Issue in American Military Practice By Evan A. Huelfer

The Casualty Issue in American Military Practice by Evan A. Huelfer


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The Casualty Issue in American Military Practice Summary

The Casualty Issue in American Military Practice: The Impact of World War I by Evan A. Huelfer

Huelfer examines the casualty issue in American military thought and practice during the years between the World Wars. He argues that Americans exhibited a distinct aversion to combat casualties duirng the Interwar Period, a phenomenon that visibly influenced the military establishment and helped shape strategic planning, force modernization, and rearmament for World War II. In a broad topical approach, Huelfer's main theme-casualty aversion-is woven into discussions about military strategy and policies, doctrinal and technological development, the military education system, and how the American officer corps emerged from World War I and prepared for World War II.

As Huelfer makes clear, aversion to combat casualties is not just a post-Vietnam War phenomenon, but rather has long been embedded within the American national heritage. Conventional wisdom link today's exacerbated aversion to combat casualties as fallout from the Vietnam debacle. In fact, this Vietnam Syndrome has remained at the forefront of contemporary strategic thinking. Huelfer shows that American political and military leaders have held lasting concerns about risking soldiers' lives in combat, even pre-dating U.S. involvement in World War II. The grim experiences of World War I had a profound impact upon the U.S. officer corps and how it viewed potential future conflicts. The casualty issue permeated the officers' strategic culture during the Interwar Period and colored their thinking about improving training, doctrinal evolution, force modernization, and technological development. Even though one cannot find the terms casualty issue, casualty aversion, or sensitivity to casualties directly stated in the speeches and writings of the era, this awareness clearly emerged as a subtext for the entire American effort in preparation for World War II. Huelfer highlights how casualty aversion shaped American strategy for World War II by incorporating ideas about the use of overwhelming force, air power, and mechanization-all designed to minimize losses.

About Evan A. Huelfer

EVAN ANDREW HUELFER is a major on active duty in the U.S. Army. He has served in a wide variety of command and staff positions. Dr. Huelfer has taught Military History at West Point. In 2003 he served as the Lead Planner for the Coalition Forces Land Component Command in Kuwait. Among his earlier publications is his edited collection Readings for the History of Military Art (2000).

Table of Contents

Preface Abbreviations Introduction The Experience of the Great War The Dark Shadow of the Great War Drawing Immediate Lessons from Combat Revamping the Military Education System The Application of American Power Strategic Planning During the Interwar Period Preparing for War, 1939-1941 Conclusion Select Bibliography Index

Additional information

NPB9780275977603
9780275977603
0275977609
The Casualty Issue in American Military Practice: The Impact of World War I by Evan A. Huelfer
New
Hardback
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
2003-10-30
264
N/A
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