Strategy and the Second World War

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'long war' strategy
1940
1941
A01=Jeremy Black
Allied
alternative outcomes
Anglo-American
appeasement
Author_Jeremy Black
Axis
Bulgaria
Category=NHWR7
China
Combined Bomber Offensive
Communism
counterfactual
development of strategy
domestic policy
economics
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Fall of France
Far East
Finland
France
geopolitics
Germany
Germany First
Hitler
Holocaust
Hungary
ideology
international relations
Italy
Japan
Military Strategy
Nazi Germany
Pearl Harbor
Plotting Power
Poland
policy
post-war
Romania
Roosevelt
Second Front
Second World War
Soviet Union
Soviet-German
strategy
strategy-making
United States
Western European powers
World War II

Product details

  • ISBN 9781472145109
  • Weight: 400g
  • Dimensions: 154 x 232mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Jul 2021
  • Publisher: Little, Brown Book Group
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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A concise, accessible account of strategy and the Second World War. How the war was won . . . and lost..

In 1941, the Second World War became global, when Nazi Germany attacked the Soviet Union; Japan attacked the United States at Pearl Harbor; and Germany declared war on the United States.

In this timely book, which fills a real gap, Black engages with the strategic issues of the time - as they developed chronologically, and interacted - and relates these to subsequent debates about the choices made, revealing their continued political resonances.

Beginning with Appeasement and the Soviet-German pact as key strategic means, Black examines the consequences of the fall of France for the strategies of all the powers. He shows how Allied strategy-making was more effective at the Anglo-American level than with the Soviet Union, not only for ideological and political reasons, but also because the Americans and British had a better grasp of the global dimension.

He explores how German and Japanese strategies evolved as the war went badly for the Axis powers, and discusses the extent to which seeking to mould the post-war world informed Allied strategic choices from 1943 onwards, and the role these played in post-war politics, notably in the Cold War.

Strategy was a crucial tool not only for conducting the war; it remains the key to understanding it today.

JEREMY BLACK is one of the country's most respected historians. Andrew Roberts described him as the 'most underrated thinker in Britain'. He is a Senior Fellow at Policy Exchange and Emeritus Professor of History at Exeter University and a renowned expert on the history of war. He appears regularly on TV and radio. His other books include Maps and History, The British Seaborne Empire and Rethinking World War Two.

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