No Heroic Battles: Lessons of the Second Lebanon War No Heroic Battles: Lessons of the Second Lebanon War

No Heroic Battles: Lessons of the Second Lebanon War

    • USD 0.99
    • USD 0.99

Descripción editorial

On July 12, 2006, Israel went to war with Hezbollah in response to the killing and capture of Israeli soldiers along the southern Lebanese border. Believed at the time by many in the West to be an overreaction to a relatively minor border incident resulted in hundreds of civilian deaths in Lebanon, the displacement of hundreds of thousands of civilians on both sides of the border, and the deaths of dozens of Israeli soldiers and civilians. More important to Israeli nation security, the war exposed basic flaws in Israel’s national security assumptions, and defense strategy.

This study reveals that Israel went to war without having clearly defined its critical political, diplomatic, or military goals and objectives. In the years immediately prior to the beginning of the war the Israeli Defense Force (IDF) rejected the long proven principles of war in favor of a novel, incoherent, and confusing doctrine. The war revealed the debilitating impact of a long counterinsurgency campaign on training, and traditional combined arms capabilities. Finally, despite the superb performance of the Israeli Air Force (IAF), airpower and technology proved to be inconclusive and a poor substitute for well-trained resolute maneuver forces directly engaging enemy forces.

GÉNERO
Historia
PUBLICADO
2015
6 de noviembre
IDIOMA
EN
Inglés
EXTENSIÓN
85
Páginas
EDITORIAL
Tannenberg Publishing
VENTAS
INscribe Digital
TAMAÑO
1
MB