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The utility of force : the art of war in the modern world (2007)

von Rupert Smith

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446755,873 (3.83)10
"War no longer exists," writes General Sir Rupert Smith, reminding us that the clash of mass national armies--the system of war since Napoleon--will never occur again. Instead, he argues, we must be prepared to adapt tactics to each conflict, or lose the ability to protect ourselves and our way of life. General Smith draws on his experience as a commander to give us a probing analysis of modern war and to call for radically new military thinking. Why do we use armed force to solve our political problems? And how is it that our armies can win battles but fail to solve the problems?--From publisher description.… (mehr)
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    Terror and Consent: The Wars for the Twenty-first Century von Philip Bobbitt (davidt8)
    davidt8: Bobbitt covers some of the same topics as General Rupert Smith, but from a different perspective. Read both!
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Possibly the best book currently available on the limits of modern warfare to 'impose your will upon the enemy'. Written by a veteran of our modern conflicts, General Smith lays out his evidence and experience to support his conclusions; that military might alone is insufficient to deal with 'war among the people'. ( )
  BruceCoulson | Jan 8, 2014 |
With the invention of the nuclear bomb, industrial warfare as it was known came to an end. But the thinking behind the use of military force remained mired in conceptions of industrial warfare. Today, General Rupert Smith compellingly argues, nations need to be concerned much more with what he calls 'war amongst the people'. The Evening Standard's blurb on the front cover compares Smith to Clausewitz and Sun Tsu, and to those you can add an element of Machiavelli as well. In war amongst the people the relationship between oneself and the people and one's enemies and the people are crucial. The prince must tread carefully and depend much more on intelligence than bombs. ( )
  fyoder | Sep 7, 2009 |
Generals aren't selected for their literary abilities, which is probably a good thing. Nevertheless, Sir Rupert presents his case in a clear, straightforward way, well-supported by historical evidence. Although he warns us in the introduction that we may wish to skip the more technical chapters, this is a very approachable book for the general reader.

On the other hand, without direct experience of the way modern armed forces are organised and the operations they carry out, it's hard to assess how radical his arguments really are. He argues, not so much that modern armies are still preparing for the last war, but rather that they are preparing for a type of war that can never take place in a world where atomic weapons exist. The "little wars", conflicts in which the armed forces of industrial nations are opposed by guerrillas or terrorists, which Smith designates as "war amongst the people", have become the main raison d'être of modern armies, but are still (he argues) seen as a secondary part of their work.

To me, most of the conclusions he comes to and advice he gives his successors sound like basic common sense: before sending in troops, we should be sure we know what we want to achieve politically, decide whether and how armed force can contribute to that aim, and set up coordinated planning and command structures that allow the military operation to work in concert with diplomatic, economic, humanitarian and other operations towards that goal. Surely these are desiderata that any political leader contemplating armed intervention would attempt to achieve, even if they aren't always possible when there is strong pressure to "do something".

Given recent history, armed intervention clearly isn't something that industrialised nations do particularly well at present, whilst those on whom we try to impose our ideas have evolved rather successful tactics for winning the hearts and minds of those they fight amongst, and in many cases also manage to undermine support for the intervention among the people whose nations have contributed troops. If books like Smith's can help our leaders rethink the way they go about launching such interventions, so much the better. But I'm not holding my breath... ( )
1 abstimmen thorold | Apr 11, 2008 |
General Rupert Smith's explanation of what modern warfare is and more importantly, what it can (and can't) do for a nation, is a very well documented text illustrating a very old problem. "The Utility of Force" tells us that war planners are trying to 'fight the last war' and provides countless examples to illustrate his point.

Smith shows us that we live in an era without battlefields. We live in an era of 'war among the people.' Tank battles between opposing armies are less likely to determine the course of a campaign than anti-insurgency efforts, political manuvering, and dealings with non-state entities.

Iraq (and our problems there) are obviously the impetus for this book and the reason why it's widely read by people outside of military circles. Unfortunately, it illuminates more failings than successes.

Before you listen to the talking heads on Fox, CNN, or MSNBC, read this book. It will give you a framework within which to evaluate the baseless opinions bandied about the airwaves.

The book is rather dense and if your history is a bit foggy, don't be afraid to pull up wikipedia to fill in some gaps.

But don't let that scare you away. ( )
2 abstimmen DCArchitect | Aug 14, 2007 |
This contentious look at modern strategy begins with a blunt statement ‘War no longer exists’. The author – who rose to the position of NATO Deputy Supreme Allied Commander Europe and before that held senior command in a number of major international theatres – proceeds to explain this extraordinary statement throughout his book by assessing the use of force in the modern era of conflict, and how it is no longer the battlefield but ‘amongst the people’ that wars are fought and decided. The purpose of this book is as a call to arms for modern strategists to move beyond past attitudes about the use of military force and to understand that resolution is unlikely to come by military defeat of an enemy alone. ( )
1 abstimmen ForrestFamily | Apr 22, 2007 |
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"War no longer exists," writes General Sir Rupert Smith, reminding us that the clash of mass national armies--the system of war since Napoleon--will never occur again. Instead, he argues, we must be prepared to adapt tactics to each conflict, or lose the ability to protect ourselves and our way of life. General Smith draws on his experience as a commander to give us a probing analysis of modern war and to call for radically new military thinking. Why do we use armed force to solve our political problems? And how is it that our armies can win battles but fail to solve the problems?--From publisher description.

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