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Military Leaders
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Military leadership sits at the intersection of political science, history, and organizational theory, making it a frequent subject in government, international relations, and military studies courses. The topic invites academic inquiry because it forces students to examine how individual decision-making shapes large-scale historical and political outcomes. Papers in this area often engage with foundational strategic thinkers — Clausewitz's paired concepts and Sun Tzu's Art of War appear directly in archived work here — providing theoretical frameworks that give analysis intellectual structure beyond simple biography or narrative.

The essays collected on this topic take a range of approaches. Some apply classical strategic theory to specific conflicts, testing whether frameworks like Clausewitz's remain useful when measured against the Korean War or the Vietnam War experience. Others focus on leadership lessons drawn from particular campaigns, such as the Falklands conflict, treating military command as a set of transferable principles. Comparative and regional perspectives also appear, situating military leadership within broader political contexts like Latin American politics or pre-colonial Mesoamerica.

A strong essay on military leadership requires a clearly bounded thesis — arguing for a specific quality, decision, or doctrine rather than broadly surveying a leader's career. Evidence drawn from primary accounts, official records, or well-established historical scholarship carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is conflating military effectiveness with moral virtue; a rigorous essay distinguishes between strategic success and ethical judgment, treating them as separate analytical categories rather than assuming one implies the other.

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Research Paper Undergraduate
Mcclellan an Analysis of George
On September 13, 1862, a pair of Union soldiers of the Twenty-Seventh of Indiana accidentally stumbled upon a copy of General Robert E. Lee's campaign orders in a field near Frederick, Maryland, where two days earlier,…
Paper Undergraduate
Military intervention and peacekeeping operations
At different phases of a conflict the multiple strategies of conflict management respond to barriers in the process in different ways: Conflict Prevention is an approach that seeks to resolve disputes before violence…
Research Paper Doctorate
U.S. History and Foreign Policy.
¶ … U.S. history and foreign policy. The writer explores the five questions and devotes two pages to each answer. There were fours sources used to complete this paper.
Paper Doctorate
C. Wright Mills's Power Elite: Then and Now
A half-century after it was written, C. Wright Mills's The Power Elite remains relevant to American society. Mills's analysis of the ways in which powerful people in different sectors of society share economic interests and so share concepts and access to power remains true of the United States now. We can see many of the same dynamics at work in this election year, for while some of the key particulars of American society have changed, the way in which power interests intersect and reinforce each other.
Paper Undergraduate
Crusades: Causes, Consequences, and Results
Several centuries after they ended, the Crusades are remembered as wars that were fought and lost in the name of God. The efforts and means utilized and maintained to continue to wage a battle for more than one hundred…
Paper Doctorate
Dereliction of Duty by H.R. McMaster Book Review
New York: HarperCollins, 1997. Pp. 446. . Illus., notes, biblio., index. $27.50. ISBN:0-06-018795-6.
Paper Undergraduate
Sputnik and the space race
¶ … New York Times treaded the Sputnik event very fairly, reporting on it in an objective manner and revealing the fear and confusion that was spreading throughout the U.S. government at the time.
Paper Undergraduate
Spain and the Americas: historical connections and development
Because I could never understand the bull fights and Spaniards' delight and fascination to watch them, I chose to watch first the Matador. I knew the chances I would become a fan after that were close to a minimum, but…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Police Leadership Crime in Britain
Crime in Britain went up from 25 to 40% a decade ago and is now the number-one issue among the population (Brand 2007). Only a third of them rate police performance well. Only 25% or one in five says he or she does not…
Paper Masters
US military involvement in the Korean Conflict
The Korean Conflict Introduction How did the Korean conflict begin? What were the dynamics behind this war? How and why did the United States get involved? How was the Korean conflict linked to the Cold War? These and other issues will be addressed in this paper. Thesis: The Korean conflict was indeed the first battle of the Cold War, and the United States, although it was thoroughly unprepared when it went into battle, came out a winner even though the end was a virtual standoff. Background on how the U.S. become involved in the Korean conflict In the book, Truman and Korea: The Political Culture of the Early Cold War, author and professor Paul G. Pierpaoli Jr. explains that after World War II the Soviet Union emerged in a "new and more powerful stance," a direct challenge to America and its "…fragile allies" (Pierpaoli, 1999, p. 17). And notwithstanding the fact that the Cold War really began to take hold in 1947 and 1948 President Truman – known as a "legendary fiscal conservative" – was very reluctant to increase the amount of money spent on the military after WW II (Pierpaoli, 1999, p. 18).