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Leaders And Battles

Leaders And Battles

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Description for LEADERS AND BATTLES: THE ART OF MILITARY LEADERSHIP by W J Wood:

How ar wars won? What makes a man fight to win? No one man can win a battle by himself, but battles have been won and lost because of the strength or failings of one individual---the leader.

What went on in the minds and hearts of a selected group of military leaders at critical moments in battle is the theme of this book.

The author recreates ten battles from history, depicting the action in vivid detail---the brilliant formations, charging horses, clanking bayonets. The point of view is always that of the commanding officer. The particular quality of leadership that won---or lost---the encounter is very clear.

For Mad Anthony Wayne at Stony Point, it was courage that won the day. For Scipio Africanus at Ilipa, it was imagination. Custer's judgment at the Little Big Horn was definitely in question. When the French stormed Ratisbon, it was Lannes's inspiration that solved the dilemma. At the battle of Bushy Run, Bouquet could never have outwitted Pontiac if he had not been flexible.<> The dynamics of battle as well as the strategy and tactics involved are equally well demonstrated. Though the means of fighting varied as much as the time and the civilizations involved, the lessons learned are just as applicable today. Men no longer fight with drawn swords, make barricades out of mealie bags, or use a swarm of bees as a weapon. But that is part of this book's fascination.

LEADERS AND BATTLES is a remarkable retelling of the fighting engagements for the arm-chair strategist. the leader in training, the history buff, and the general reader.

"Whether was is a necessary factor in the evolution of mankind may be disputed, but a fact which cannot be questioned is that, from the earliest records of man to the present age, war has been his dominant preoccupation." (J.F.C. Fuller)

We are approaching the time when the big and little wars of the century can be written about with the historical detachment and understanding that Lieutenant Colonel Wood displays here. In the meantime, we can profit by these lessons of history.

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