A DETAILED STUDY OF ONE OF THE MOST INFLUENTIAL COMMANDERS OF WORLD
WAR II, ONE WHO IS OFTEN REGARDED AS A 'FLAWED GENIUS'.
Orde Wingate rose to fame by creating the Chindits in Burma in 1943.
He is an extremely important figure in military history, and deserves
just as much attention as Alanbrooke, Montgomery, and Auchinleck.
Unlike them, however, he always operated outside the accepted
etiquette and the formal chain of command. He was a maverick and
misfit, and he held to the belief that the type of mass warfare
demonstrated on the Western Front (1914–18) had very little to do
with the warfare of the future. He believed that the latter would
require an 'indirect approach', in which heavily lumbering armies
would be exquisitely vulnerable to small groups of highly motivated,
mobile and well-armed guerrillas.
This book covers Wingate's experiences in pre-war Palestine, in
Ethiopia in 1941 (where he formed an irregular guerrilla unit to
harass the Italian garrisons) and in World War II Burma, where the two
Chindit campaigns would be his apotheosis.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781782003007
Publisert
2020
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter