Military - Strategy, Future Studies & Forecasting - General & Miscellaneous, Science & Technology - Forecasting, Politics & Government - Forecasting
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Overview
Highly acclaimed military strategist and writer Ralph Peters challenges America's defense establishment and national leadership with startling insights and no-holds-barred criticism. His radical assessment of the future of conflict and the kinds of enemies we will face has already excited international controversy and influenced policy. Peters identifies a "new warrior class" and a new culture of conflict that could undo America on the battlefields of the future, as seen in the events of September 11, 2001. He broadly reinterprets the meaning of strategy. His writing--tough, yet elegant--makes dramatic new ideas accessible to the general reader, as well as to businessmen, diplomats, and soldiers. Will America Win? Yes, but only if her leaders open their minds to the new and dangerous international environment left in the wake of the Cold War.Editorials
Newsweek
[Ralph Peters is] considered to be one of the best military minds of his generation.Washington Post
Few have been more provocative or more diligent in pursuit of large and difficult truths...a strong and clarifying case for radical policy review.Ernest Blazar
Peters takes aim at a number of targets....[as] he attempts to chart the likely global security landscape of the early 21st century and cattle prod the United States into being prepared for the challenges....Peters clearly has a fertile imagination -- one that...hits more worthy targets that it misses.— The Washington Monthly
Kirkus Reviews
A collection of essays by top-selling Peters, author of A Perfect Soldier (1995). Reprinted from such military-science publications as Parameters, Army Times, and Strategic Review, these essays pose major questions about America's military preparedness to fight the type of conflicts likely to arise in the 21st century, those involving terrorist organizations (both independent and state-sponsored), ethnic strife, and an emerging Third World. Peters examines such possibilities with a sharp eye and then considers the ways in which the American armed forces are preparing to fight them. While his analysis is cogent, his conclusions—for example, that the spectacularly expensive weapons systems being produced today are designed to combat Cold War enemies that no longer exist—are hardly as shocking or controversial as he himself would have the reader believe. (In fact, as long as there has been a military, there have been critics to point out flaws in preparedness.) While Peters is a reasonably proficient writer, his essays are marred by trite epigrams placed throughout the text, offering such no-brainer musings as "Revolutions happen, above all, in the minds of men" and "If there is a single power the West underestimates, it is the power of collective hatred." When the author gets down to specific topics, such as the future of armored warfare or soldiering in an urban environment, he is at his best; unfortunately these sections form only a small portion of the book. And Peters's prose is pedantic, cliché-ridden, and repetitive.Book Details
Published
January 1, 2002
Publisher
Stackpole Books
Pages
210
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780811740456