Troubled American Way of War

Regular price €31.99
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Afghanistan War
air power
algorithmic warfare
American military strategy
anti-missile systems
attack on Pearl Harbor
attrition
Author_John Arquilla
books on cyberwar
books on military intervention
books on the US military
botnets
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computational analytics
counterterrorism
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cyberspace
encryption
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forthcoming
game theory
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Harry Truman
Hiroshima
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invasion of Grenada
invasion of Panama
Iraq War
irregular warfare
Korean War
Kuwait
machine warfare
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military doctrine
Myanmar
Nagasaki
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quantum computing
robot networks
Russo-Ukrainian War
special operations
state building
Taiwan
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Vietnam War
what is limited war
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world war 3

Product details

  • ISBN 9781509560905
  • Publication Date: 24 Apr 2026
  • Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Since the end of World War II, the United States has been the world's preeminent military power. Yet it has suffered as much failure as it has experienced victory. The bloody stalemate in Korea, defeats in Vietnam and Afghanistan, and difficulties fighting Iraqi insurgents, reflect persistent problems with U.S. military strategy. Beyond these conflicts, soldiers and civilian analysts have flirted, since Hiroshima, with highly dangerous ideas about waging and winning a nuclear war.

In this astute critique, leading defense expert John Arquilla identifies the blind spots preventing the U.S. from achieving sustained military success. Drawing on a range of sources, including high-level insiders, he argues that the U.S. has fixated on three aspects of military affairs – strategic air power, nuclear weaponry, and informational/computational analytics – to its detriment and at the expense of effective innovation. This matters not only for the U.S. and its allies, but for its broader impact on the future of war.

Given the continuing challenges posed by insurgents and terrorists, a new round of great-power competition, and increasing reliance on AI, the troubled American way of war urgently needs redesigning. At stake is the stability and security of global order.
John Arquilla is a true visionary in national security and technology. Together with David Ronfeldt, he coined the term 'cyberwar' and was one of the first analysts to appreciate how digital technologies were transforming the nature of conflict. Now Distinguished Professor Emeritus at the United States Naval Postgraduate School, Arquilla is the author, most recently, of Bitskrieg: The New Challenge of Cyberwarfare.