War, Peace, and International Relations. An Introduction to Strategic History

(John Hannent) #1

Boxes and tables



  • Introduction: strategic history Preface xiii

  • 1 Themes and contexts of strategic history

    • Introduction: a binding framework

    • Themes

    • Contexts

    • Conclusion



  • 2 Carl von Clausewitz and the theory of war

    • Introduction: theory for all seasons

    • Strategic ideas and strategic behaviour

    • Jomini and Clausewitz

    • Conclusion

    • Napoleonic way of war 3 From limited war to national war: the French Revolution and the

    • Introduction: two transformations

    • Limited war and great war

    • The Revolution and its warfare

    • Napoleon’s art of war

    • Problems with the Napoleonic way of war and warfare

    • Political and strategic failure

    • Conclusion



  • 4 The nineteenth century, I: a strategic view

    • Introduction: the reach of strategic history

    • A violent century

      • Implications of the Industrial Revolution: the strategic tale

      • Conclusion

      • order 5 The nineteenth century, II: technology, warfare and international

      • Introduction: Waterloo to the Marne

      • Weapons and warfare

      • Politics and strategic history

      • Conclusion



    • 6 World War I, I: controversies

      • Introduction: the making of the twentieth century

      • A contested history

      • Conclusion



    • 7 World War I, II: modern warfare

      • Introduction: education by experience

      • The course of the war

      • Modern warfare

      • Conclusion



    • 8 The twenty-year armistice, 1919–39

      • Introduction: contrasting decades

      • Versailles and the legacy of the Great War

      • The changing political context: strategic implications

      • Conclusion



    • 9 The mechanization of war

      • Introduction: revolution in military affairs

      • Land warfare

      • Air power

      • Sea power

      • Conclusion





  • 10 World War II in Europe, I: the structure and course of total war

    • Introduction: total war

    • The structure of the war

    • The course of the war

    • Conclusion



  • 11 World War II in Europe, II: understanding the war

    • Introduction: what was the war about?

    • Hitler’s war

    • Warfare, 1939–45

    • Why did Germany lose?

    • Conclusion



  • 12 World War II in Asia–Pacific, I: Japan and the politics of empire

    • Introduction: global war

    • The Japanese bid for empire

    • Japan and the United States: the drift to war

    • Conclusion



  • 13 World War II in Asia–Pacific, II: strategy and warfare

    • Introduction: over the cliff

    • Japanese strategy

    • American strategy

    • The end for Japan

    • Conclusion



  • 14 The Cold War, I: politics and ideology

    • Introduction: from war to peace – the consequences of World War II

    • From cold peace to Cold War

    • The Cold War reconsidered

    • Some interim judgements

    • Conclusion



  • 15 The Cold War, II: the nuclear revolution

    • Introduction: the strategic challenge

    • The bomb

    • The nuclear revolution

    • Nuclear strategy

    • The nuclear arms competition

    • Conclusion



  • 16 War and peace after the Cold War: an interwar decade

    • Introduction: the interwar thesis

    • A unipolar world

    • ‘New wars’ and ‘old wars’: a bloody decade

    • Conclusion



  • 17 9/11 and the age of terror

    • Introduction: the return of a master narrative

    • 9/11: World War III?

    • Warfare: from the Industrial Age to the Information Age

    • Conclusion



  • 18 Irregular warfare: guerrillas, insurgents and terrorists

    • Introduction: two kinds of warfare

    • Guerrilla warfare, insurgency and terrorism

    • Irregular warfare: an overview

    • Terrorism and counter-terrorism

    • Al Qaeda and the ‘New Terrorism’

    • Conclusion



  • 19 War, peace and international order

    • Introduction: war–peace cycle

    • New world orders

    • Conclusion



  • 20 Conclusion: must future strategic history resemble the past?

    • Glossary

    • Bibliography

    • Index

    • 3.1 Europe in Maps

    • 4.1 Europe in

    • 6.1 Europe in

    • 8.1 Europe between the wars



  • 12.1 The Pacific in

  • 14.1 Europe after

  • 16.1 Europe after the Cold War

    • 1.1 Themes in strategic history Boxes

    • 1.2 Contexts of strategic history

    • 2.1 The principles of war

      • briefly in On War 2.2 Important subjects deliberately omitted from or treated only



    • 3.1 Tactics, operations and strategy

    • 3.2 The Napoleonic way of warfare

    • 4.1 Modern military revolutions

    • 5.1 The revolution in infantry firepower, 1840–1914

    • 8.1 Principal features of the Versailles Settlement



  • 11.1 Hitler’s vision and war aims as revealed in Mein Kampf

  • 13.1 Characteristics of war and warfare in Asia–Pacific, 1941–5

  • 14.1 The consequences of World War II

  • 15.1 The scientific and technological feasibility of atomic weapons

  • 15.2 Two kinds of nuclear weapons

  • 18.1 Irregular warfare: definition of key terms

    • 6.1 Casualties in World War I Tables



  • 10.1 Casualties in World War II

  • 15.1 Nuclear stockpiles, 1945–89

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