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War Made New: Technology, Warfare, and the Course of History: 1500 to Today
by Max Boot
Why It's Better To Be Smart Than Strong
A review by Paul McLeary
If nothing else, one would hope that the war in Iraq would dispel
the myth that wars can be fought through the seemingly bloodless medium
of "smart" bombs.
Max Boot, in his meticulously researched new book, War Made New: Technology, Warfare, and the Course of History, 1500 to Today,
does as much as any other writer of recent vintage to bring the fleshy
reality of warfare back into view by looking at how technological
advances, coupled with the innovations of field commanders, have
changed warfare over the past five centuries.
Boot divides revolutions in warfare from 1500 to the present into
four main categories: The Gunpowder Revolution, the Industrial
Revolution, the Second Industrial Revolution, and the Information
Revolution.
While the weaponry and the tactics from one "revolution" to the next
vary greatly, Boot identifies a few factors that have spanned the
centuries.
The first is that change rarely comes from outside the military. "At
best, civilians can play a supporting role in aiding military mavericks
against their bureaucratic foes," Boot writes.
For the most part, Boot stays away from politics and touches on
economics only briefly in order to explain how innovations in tactics
or weaponry have allowed smaller, or less wealthy, nations to beat back
their seemingly more formidable foes.
"The rise and fall of nations," he writes,"...is largely a tale
of which ones took advantage of these military and naval revolutions
and which ones did not. Sheer size or wealth was not a good predictor
of military outcomes."
In his examination of the "gunpowder revolution," Boot details three
examples of a larger, richer party losing to a smaller but smarter
opponent: the defeat of the Spanish Armada (outgunned by the more
adaptable British fleet), the battle at Brietenfeld (where Swedish King
Gustavus Adolphus used innovations in troop deployment and artillery to
best the Imperial Army of the Hapsburg Empire during the Thirty Years'
War in the first half of the 17th century), and the Maratha Confederacy
(in which British Major-General Wellesley cut down a vastly superior
force of Indian irregulars).
During the "industrial revolutions," which stretch from the mid-19th
century to the end of World War II, the innovations in weaponry took a
decidedly more deadly turn, when countries like Japan, Germany, and the
United States bested their competitors in the development of railroads
(which allowed for better troop transit) and machine guns (which helped
the British to defeat numerically superior forces in Africa and India
in the late 19th century).
A good portion of Boot's treatment of the "information revolution"
deals with the already well-documented military prowess of the United
States during the latter half of the 20th century. Boot's chapters on
the Afghan and Iraq wars are evocative, but have been more thoroughly
documented in books like Steve Coll's Ghost Wars and Cobra II by
Michael Gordon and Bernard Trainor.
That said, War Made New remains a timely and important work,
providing an excellent thumbnail sketch of the sometimes simultaneous
strokes of genius, luck, and technological smarts that kings and
generals have used for centuries to best their enemies in the field.
Paul McLeary is a reporter for the Columbia Review of Journalism.
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