Military Tactics Essay

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    Military strategy forever had been battles of attrition, men throwing themselves at each other until a winner was determined, this form of battle was replaced in Europe during the 16th and 17th century. The change in military strategy took place mostly in Europe, and the countries at the forefront of this were the Swedish empire and the Netherlands. The Swedes and Dutch changed many military strategies and practices which were in place for thousands of years and changed the standard for militaries

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    Napoleon Bonaparte is credited with being a great military tactician as well as a military genius during his era. He played a significant role in world history and the art of war. The man’s genius was fundamentally practical, and all the military concepts he used were attributed to his close study that he did of his earlier commanders, predominantly Fredrick the Great. He did not trust any novel idea and thus by no means used other people’s concepts. He made the fullest utilization of the notions

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    Current militaries have benefitted from the principles of ancient Greek and Roman warfare by studying the ancient battles, tactics, and use of supplies to develop effective military plans. Current militaries study and debate historical turning points of the ancient battles to understand how the leaders planned and executed battles. The empires’ growth was due in part to the might and successes of their military. The strength of their militaries came from many factors including their use of armor

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    are two important military theorists that have emerged from the French Revolution. Antoine-Henri Jomini, and Carl von Clausewitz both were considered the brightest military thinkers of the time. Jomini’s The art of war is the best military document of the time and consists of six military, branches they are statesmanship, strategy, grand tactics, logistics, engineering and minor tactics. Jomini’s ideas and thought’s on statesmanship and its relation to war, strategy, grand tactics, logistics, and engineering

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    five foundation; superior technology, disciplined soldiers, the means to finance wars, and military traditions. Disciplined soldiers, superior technology, and the financial means to fund wars are three elements that have defined success and shaped conflicts throughout Western Civilization. Disciplined soldiers have always been the core of any effective military strategy based on the employment of tactics and the effectiveness of their weapons. Superior discipline and training was an integral

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    reliance on superior technology, discipline, and training, the means to finance wars, challenge and response and Western military traditions. This essay examines how three principles disciplined soldiers, superior technology, and the financial means to fund armies shaped conflicts throughout western civilization. Disciplined soldiers have always been the center of any military strategy based on

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    For millennia mankind has exhausted endless amounts of energy contemplating the eternally complicated system of war. From Gangas Khan to America’s involvement in the Middle East, all successful generals, military leaders, and conquerors have found commonality in their zealous emphasis on, and desire for, possessing the most technologically advanced forms of weaponry. Such a desire was not ignored in America nor England during the Industrial Revolution, but, rather, was seen by many as an opportune

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    nature of land warfare, increased the complexity of war, and produced weapons deadlier than ever before. The development of the machine gun, rail, telegraph, poisonous gas, artillery, and radar are just a few of the evolution in military technology. The evolution of military technology did not happen overnight; it took years, even decades to notice any significant changes. However, slow incremental changes did occur by improving on what already existed. Consider the flintlock used in the 16th century

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    ROTC can help fill the civilian-military gap through the education of the civilian population. Public knowledge needs to be increased through positive experiences between the civilian populace and the military. Being a programed designed for the commissioning of officers, ROTC trains civilian students as military officers equipped with the knowledge to train future soldiers on civil-military relations. Being such an important bridge between the civilian and military world, this paper will cover the

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    The Military Revolution

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    Holub, Martin HIST; midterm #2 The military revolution was a direct outcome of changes in the virtuosity of war between 1560 and 1660. The changes crucially influenced campaigning and combat in Europe during the late 17th and early 18th centuries. The most influential alterations included transformation in weapons, growth in the army size, change in tactics and organization, and centralization of the states’ bureaucracies. There were many battles in the late 17th and early 18th centuries that

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