Introduction
Military historians and strategists alike have written volumes of content on the American way of war. Given the developments such as the American troops' involvement in Afghanistan and their leaving Iraq, it is, perhaps, time to relook the American way of war for conflicts in the future. Russel Weigley[footnoteRef:1]was the first to attempt to define the American approach to the war in 1973. Many writers have grappled with the concept as they try pointing out the various strategies of America to war and trying to distinguish between a way of battle and a way of war. They illustrate the pros and cons of these traits in both major wars and smaller conflicts.[footnoteRef:2] Historians have also attempted to describe the nature of the American strategic approach to war, which entails the advancement of America's national interests in a wide range of ways. It shows how our culture shapes the American strategy towards war. [1: Was the Distinguished University Professor of History at Temple University in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and a noted military historian.] [2: From “Lost in Translation: The American Way of War” by R. L. Keravuori, 2011, Small Wars Journal, 17]
The Methodology of the American War
The whole set of historians and their debate regarding the American way of war revolve around the thesis by Professor Weigley[footnoteRef:3]. Weigley was preoccupied with US military activities, starting from the Independence War to the War in Vietnam.[footnoteRef:4] According to the professor, there was a decisive shift from the attrition strategy to annihilation in the course of the civil war. The American military generals attempted to shatter the enemy troops on the battlefront, irrespective of the political objectives[footnoteRef:5]. Although the thesis remained unchallenged for decades, it has faced criticism from military operations critics, that it failed to clarify the attrition versus annihilation approaches, that it can only be effectively applied in some wars and not others, and that it does not give room for improvement of strategy and change in the course of a conflict. [3: One of Weigley's most widely received contributions to research is his hypothesis of a specifically American Way of War, i.e....
References
Echevarria, A. J. (2004). Toward an American way of war. US Army Command and General Staff School.
Hoffman, F.G. (2014). Adapt, innovate, and adapt some more. Proceedings, US Naval Institute, Annapolis, Maryland, 410, 268–6110.
Keravuori, R. L. (2011). Lost in Translation: The American Way of War. Small Wars Journal, 17.
Linn, B. M. (2010). The American Way of War Debate: An Overview. Historically Speaking, 11(5), 22-23.
Stewart, R. W. (2010). M521RA: Excerpt from War in the Persian Gulf: Operation DESERT SHIELD and DESERT STORM, August 1990-March 1991 (Vol. 70). US Army Command and General Staff School.
Weigley, R. F. (1977). The American way of war: a history of United States military strategy and policy. Indiana University Press.
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