защо никой не пише вече тука аз щото нямам пари, не за друго
Съобщение
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Вашата военноисторическа колекция
Collapse
X
-
поръчах Stumbling Colossus: The Red Army on the Eve of World War
и открих: U.S. Army Center of Military History цъкайте на Online Bookshelves и се радвайте
още нещо: Strategic Studies Institute в секцията Publications е материала
още нещо: http://www.911investigations.net/
още нещо: National Defence University - Institute for National Strategic Studies - McNair Papers има една даже за Б-я
въобще от http://www.ndu.edu/research.cfm тръгвате и по сайтовете в секциите Research или Publications има камари неща. Аз съм ползвал някои като писах хартията за Китайската армия.
още: Naval War College - пак по същата процедура
още: Combat Studies Institute - Publications, Research и Staff Ride (последното май е само за битки на американска земя)
още: Air War College (AWC) Gateway to Internet Resources
Retrieve the information about the Strategic_studies_institute_u_ publisher and many more on the go! Keep your books related project up to date with 19 data points per book searchable via API on ISBNdb, the world’s largest book database.
The Big Issue: Command and Combat in the Information Age (ок. 2мб)
някой ден пак ще седна да търся
смятам, че американските военни институти са най-добрите източници на аналитична информация по военна история в момента, най-малкото, почти всичко е достъпно онлайн и поне каквото съм чел е доста обективноalbireo написа...в този форум... основно е пълно с теоретици, прогнили интелигенти и просто кръчмаро-кибици...
Comment
-
On War #42: Post-Machine Gun Tactics
Thirty years ago this month, I first went to the field with the United States Marine Corps. I was a new staffer for Senator Robert Taft, Jr., of Ohio, and the Marines had invited me down for the "Company War" at The Basic School at Quantico, Virginia. Early one frosty November morning, I found myself standing in the commander's hatch of an M-48 tank moving about two miles per hour with the infantry walking alongside, just as in 1917. When we reached the "objective," which was an enemy machine gun nest, the tank stopped while the infantry formed a line two men deep and walked into the machine gun. I turned to the Marine major who was my escort and asked, "Where are Frederick the Great and the band?" It was obvious that what I was seeing was not modern war.
Sadly, the last time I went to the field with TBS a couple years ago, little had changed. I again watched the lieutenants hurl themselves against enemy machine guns. When the attack had concluded, I turned to them and said, "You know you are all dead, don't you?" One of the lieutenants replied, "We know that, but what else can you do?"
There are answers to that question, in the form of the "post-machine gun tactics" developed during and after World War I by a number of foreign armies. Those tactics are now readily available to Marine lieutenants and everyone else, through three superb books written by a former Marine Corps gunnery sergeant, H. John Poole.
John Poole's first book, The Last Hundred Yards, came out in 1997 and immediately acquired almost cult status with Marine NCOs. As Bruce Gudmundsson, the author of Stormtroop Tactics, said, it represented at least a half-century's advance over official Marine Corps (and U.S. Army) tactics. Of critical importance, it also filled a gap left by writings such as Gudmundsson's book and my own Maneuver Warfare Handbook by looking in great detail at the level where tactics and techniques come together, the world of the fire team, squad and platoon. It opened a whole new world to corporals, sergeants and staff NCOs by focusing on that toughest of battlefield problems, covering the last hundred yards to the enemy. It showed them that you do not have to (and never should) throw your men into enemy machine guns.
In August 2001, Gunny Poole published another book with a different take on the same problem: Phantom Soldier: The Enemy's Answer to U.S. Firepower. Here, Poole focused on the Asian way of war, where tactics usually follow the indirect approach. Avoiding the frontal jousting contests beloved by Western armies, Eastern militaries usually use stealth, subtlety and fieldcraft to evade Western firepower and take their enemies from behind, in a manner and at a time the enemy least expects. When the U.S. invaded Afghanistan, Phantom Soldier suddenly became the hottest book in the Pentagon - which did not prevent the failure of Operation Anaconda, where al Qaeda fought exactly as Poole said an Eastern force would fight.
John Poole's newest book has just come out. Titled The Tiger's Way: A U.S. Private's Best Chance for Survival, it looks at Asian, Russian and German small-unit tactics to draw the best from each. Most importantly, Poole uses his new book to redefine "the basics," that mantra of bad infantry instructors who use the term to justify their "Hey-diddle-diddle, straight-up-the-middle" approach that measures success in own casualties. Gunny Poole's new basics, each of which gets its own chapter, are microterrain appreciation, harnessing the senses, night familiarity (which is far more than night vision devices), nondetectable movement, guarded communication, discreet force at close range (of prime importance in Iraq, where the U.S. Army's indiscreet use of firepower is daily generating more enemies), combat deception and one-on-one tactical decision making, which encourages thinking and initiative down through the most junior ranks.
It is of course inexcusable that most of the schools American privates go through still teach pre-machine gun tactics. If the Pentagon thought about war, that would be one of the first things it would change. But so long as the Pentagon thinks only about programs and money, American soldiers and Marines will need to discover post-machine gun tactics on their own. Gunny Poole's books offer them a readily available way to do so. My advice to our junior infantry leaders is, get these books and read them now if you want to keep your men alive.
* * *
тъжна картинка :twisted:albireo написа...в този форум... основно е пълно с теоретици, прогнили интелигенти и просто кръчмаро-кибици...
Comment
-
Дааа, много забавна и тъжна картинка. И позната бих казал. Това означава, че напразно плюем по нашите военни и педагогическите и интелектуалните им способности - и в държавата, която хъврля най-много пари за военни нужди нещата не са много по-добре. Те не просто се готвя за предишната война, те се готвят според военни рецепти от по-по-миналия век . Явно липсата на качествени анализаторски екипи, които да се занимават с анализ на бойния опит (не само собствения, но и миналия,/чуждия и т.н.) е сериозен проблем и при тях.
Comment
-
аха, американската армия е пълна с примери за недомислици и откровена некадърност
а вижте на какво попаднах - http://www.vi-books.com/catalog.phpalbireo написа...в този форум... основно е пълно с теоретици, прогнили интелигенти и просто кръчмаро-кибици...
Comment
-
а ако някой от вас е особено богат, винаги може да ме зарадва - http://www.amazon.com/gp/registry/re...=2YZY2QPTN90IFalbireo написа...в този форум... основно е пълно с теоретици, прогнили интелигенти и просто кръчмаро-кибици...
Comment
-
я препоръчайте какво да си разпечатам от милитерата че сега съм на вълна експлоатация на офис материали
сега съм си разпечатал цялата книжка на Триандафилов, двустранно и прилежно.albireo написа...в този форум... основно е пълно с теоретици, прогнили интелигенти и просто кръчмаро-кибици...
Comment
-
двете препоръчани са разпечатани, колко хартия изхабих е друг въпрос
ако можеш да се оправиш с този сайт, наличната информация е...
...безкрайна
съвсем сериозно говоря
П.С. - Извинявам се. Вие май няма да имате достъп, защото сега видях че имам такъв от колежа... Ще гледам да извадя по-интересните статии и да ги кача или нещо от сорта.albireo написа...в този форум... основно е пълно с теоретици, прогнили интелигенти и просто кръчмаро-кибици...
Comment
-
Tova naistina e bezkaraina baza danni i za sujalenie e platenea i az samo ot uni-to imam dostup btw ima i drugi takiva kato EBSCO i t.n.(Ima6 li ideq kolko se pla6ta za tova?)Fairness is a wonderful attribute, Major Anderson. It has nothing to do with war."
Page 97
"Human beings didn't evolve brains in order to lie around on lakes. Killing's the first thing we learned. And a good thing we did, or we'd be dead, and the tigers would own the earth."
Page 241
"I am your enemy, the first one you've ever had who was smarter than you. There is no teacher but the enemy. No one but the enemy will tell you what the enemy is going to do. No one but the enemy will ever teach you how to destroy and conquer. Only the enemy tells you where he is strong. And the rules of the game are what you can do to him and what you can stop him from doing to you. I am your enemy from now on. From now on I am your teacher."
Page 262
Ender's Game
Comment
Comment