Losing Military Supremacy: The Myopia of American Strategic Planning Audiobook (Free) | AudioBooksLoft

Losing Military Supremacy: The Myopia of American Strategic Planning Audiobook (Free)

Summary:

Time after time the American army has failed to match lofty declarations on the subject of it is superiority, producing instead a mediocre record of army accomplishments. Beginning with the Korean War america hasn’t won a single war against a technologically second-rate, but mentally hard enemy. The technical sizing of American ‘technique’ has completely overshadowed any concern with the social, social, operational, as well as tactical requirements of armed service (and political) conflict..READING MORE about Losing Army Supremacy: The Myopia of American Strategic Setting up With a fresh cold war with Russia emerging, the United States enters a fresh amount of geopolitical turbulence completely unprepared in any meaningful way-intellectually, economically, militarily, or culturally-to face a reality that was hidden going back seventy-plus years in back of the drape of never-ending Chalabi moments and a tactical delusion concerning Russia, whose history the united states viewed through a Solzhenitsified caricature kept alive by a powerful neocon lobby, which even today dominates US policy makers’ minds.

This book

explores the dramatic difference between the Russian and US method of warfare, which manifests itself across the whole spectral range of activities from art and the economy, to the respective country wide cultures;illustrates the actual fact that Russian economic, military, and cultural realities and power are no longer what American ‘elites’ believe they are by handling Russia’s new and raised capacities in the areas of traditional warfare aswell as cyberwarfare and space; and research in depth many ways that the US can simply stumble into discord with Russia and what can be done to avoid it.Martyanov’s ex – Soviet military history enables deep insight in to the fundamental problems of warfare and armed forces power as a function of national power-assessed properly, not through the zoom lens of Wall Road ‘economic’ indices and a FIRE economy, but through the numbers of enclosed technological cycles and lifestyle, much of which has been shaped in Russia by continental warfare and which is practically absent in the US.