Command Crisis: Influence of Command Culture on the Allied Defeat at Suvla Bay Command Crisis: Influence of Command Culture on the Allied Defeat at Suvla Bay

Command Crisis: Influence of Command Culture on the Allied Defeat at Suvla Bay

    • $0.99
    • $0.99

Publisher Description

The IX Corps of the British Mediterranean Expeditionary Force (MEF) achieved a complete tactical surprise of the Turkish defenders with its landing on 6 August 1915. Yet, despite a huge superiority in resources and a ten-to-one advantage in men, the IX Corps failed to obtain its planned objectives. This study examines the extent that the outcome of the British failure was influenced by the prevalent British Army command culture.

The British Army command culture of 1916 was directly linked to its past as a colonial police force. Although well suited for that role, it was unable to effectively deal with the changes in warfare and the rapidly expanding sizes of armies in 1916. The British command culture of the time consisted a personalized system that exercised a reliance on a system of seniority, a hands-off method of command at the senior and operational levels, and a restrictive method of control at the tactical level.

GENRE
History
RELEASED
2015
November 6
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
86
Pages
PUBLISHER
Lucknow Books
SELLER
Bookwire US Inc.
SIZE
4.6
MB
Gallipoli Gallipoli
2015
Tug of War Tug of War
2004
Fields of Fire Fields of Fire
2014
Operation Market Garden Operation Market Garden
2016
Cinderella Army Cinderella Army
2006
The Great Mistake The Great Mistake
2004