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The Strategic Culture of the Habsburg Army
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 February 2009
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- Copyright © Center for Austrian Studies, University of Minnesota 2001
References
1 Liddell Hart, Basil H., The British Way in Warfare: Adaptability and Mobility (London, 1942).Google Scholar See also Lawrence, Freedman, “Alliance and the British Way in Warfare,” Review of International Studies 21 (1995): 145–58,Google Scholar and Alex, Danchev, “Liddell Hart and the Indirect Approach,” Journal of Military History 63 (1997): 313–37.Google Scholar
2 For example, Weigley, Russell F., The American Way of War: A History of United States Military Strategy and Policy (New York, 1973);Google ScholarKiernan, Frank A. Jr and Fairbank, John K., eds., Chinese Ways in Warfare (Cambridge, Mass., 1974);CrossRefGoogle ScholarBaxter, William P., The Soviet Way of Warfare (London, 1986).Google Scholar See also Hanson, Victor Davis, The Western Way of War: Infantry Battle in Classical Greece (New York, 1989).Google Scholar
3 Snyder, Jack L., The Soviet Strategic Culture: Implications for Limited Nuclear Operations, RANDR-2154-AF (Santa Monica, Calif., 1977).Google Scholar
4 For example, Alan, Macmillan, “Strategic Culture and National Ways in Warfare: The British Case,” journal of the Royal United Services Institution 140 (1995): 33–38.Google Scholar See also Colin, Mclnnes, Hot War, Cold War: The British Army's Way in Warfare, 1945–95 (London, 1996), especially 1–3,26–31, and Danchev, “Liddell Hart and the Indirect Approach,” 327.Google Scholar
5 McInnes, Hot War, Cold War, 3.
6 Rothenberg, Gunther E., “The Shield of the Dynasty: Reflections on the Habsburg Army, 1649–1918,” in this volume, and in his previous works, including The Army of Francis Joseph (West Lafayette, Ind., 1976; reprint ed., 1998);Google ScholarNapoleon's, Great Adversaries: The Archduke Charles and the Austrian Army, 1792–1814 (Bloomington, Ind., 1982); The Military Border in Croatia, 1740–1881 (Chicago, 1966); and The Austrian Military Border in Croatia, 1522–1747 (Champaign–Urbana, III., 1960).Google Scholar
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10 With its own population booming at a rate higher than that of Austria–Hungary, Germany, in fact, did not maintain such a level of military strength in peacetime. Only on the eve of World War I did the army insist on, and the Reichstag fund, an expansion of the army to a level of strength equal to 1 percent of the population.
11 Owen, Connelly, Blundering to Glory: Napoleon's Military Campaigns (Wilmington, Del., 1987), 1.Google Scholar
12 For more detail on the arguments raised in the following paragraphs, see Lawrence, Sondhaus, Franz Conrad von Hötzendorf: Architect of the Apocalypse (Boston, 2000).Google Scholar
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