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A distinctive collection of essays capturing Lawrence Freedman's insightful analysis across war, strategy, and foreign policy and providing a unique view of the key thinkers that shaped history.One of the world's foremost scholars of warfare, both historical and contemporary, Lawrence Freedman has also played an important role in policymaking, serving as an official historian of both the Falklands War and on the UK inquiry into the 2003 Iraq War. Since the publication of his best-selling 
Strategy in 2013, Freedman has continued to explore many of the themes he raised in the book while commenting on ongoing conflicts.
On Strategists and Strategy combines the best of Freedman's many essays from the past ten years on warfare and foreign policy, alongside more personal pieces on the scholars who influenced him and his own life trajectory. The range of his interests is demonstrated in this lively and engaging collection of essays. They cover a wide range of topics, including Vladimir Putin's strategic fanaticism; arguments on why we don't take tactics seriously enough and why "stalemate" is used incorrectly as a metaphor for deadlock in war; considerations of the dilemmas of nuclear deterrence; and what Covid tells us about crisis management. The material on his own life is richly contextual, attuned to the broader historical trends and social forces in 1960s and 1970s Britain that shaped his experiences.
This volume not only provides a broad-ranging sampling of Freedman's most representative work, but also offers a unique window into a half century of world history.
Table des matières
- Introduction
 
- PART I: ORIGINS 
 
- 1: On Scepticism and Scavenging
 
- 2: Michael Howard: A Reminiscence
 
- PART II: ACADEMICS AND POLICY-MAKING 
 
- 3: Academics and Policy-Making: Rules of Engagement
 
- 4: Review Essay, Michael Desch, Cult of the Irrelevant
 
- 5: The Benefits of Hindsight: Historical Research and Political Accountability
 
- 6: The Chicago Speech and Criteria for the Use of Force
 
- 7: Iraq 20 Year On: The Story of the Missing Weapons of Mass Destruction
 
- 8: The UK Military Contribution to the Iraq War
 
- 9: Blair's Decision to Support Bush's War
 
- PART III: PEOPLE 
 
- 10: Strategy's Evangelist: Colin Gray
 
- 11: The Intellectual Legacy of Michael Quinlan
 
- 12: Robert Jervis, Realism, and Misperceptions
 
- 13: John McDonald: Poker-Playing Popularizer of Game Theory
 
- 14: Strategic Fanaticism: Vladimir Putin and Ukraine
 
- 15: Nelson Mandela as a Strategist
 
- PART IV: ISSUES 
 
- 16: Ancient Lessons for Modern Crisis
 
- 17: The Death of Captain Waskow: In Praise of the Infantry
 
- 18: Does Artificial Intelligence Change the Nature of War?
 
- 19: Terrorism as Strategy
 
- 20: Israel: Beyond Deterrence
 
- 21: For King and Country
 
- 22: Stalemate, Zugzwang, and a Long Middle Game
 
- PART V: REVIEWS
 
- 23: Oppenheimer: The Bomb, Morality, and Strategy
 
- 24: My Kendom for a Horse? Barbie: A Strategic Analysis
 
A propos de l'auteur
Lawrence Freedman was Professor of War Studies at King's College London from 1982 to 2014 and Vice-Principal of the College from 2002 to 2013. He was the Official Historian of the Falklands Campaign and a member of the UK Inquiry into the Iraq War. He is the author of several books, including 
Strategy: A History (Oxford, 2013).