Admiral's War College


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"He who aspires to peace, should prepare for war"
-Flavius Vegetius Renatus, De Re Militari

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The Art of War - Audiobook


"Conquer or be conquered"

-Admiral David Farragut


A brief lecture on Clausewitz presented by the US Army War College.

It's important to understand that the American military doctrine and strategy is self described as Clausewitzian. This means that the US Military has developed it's doctrine not around the skilled art of warfare, but around an overwhelmingly direct approach to warfare.

This is important because in perceived strength lies arrogance and pride. Two factors that lead to downfall. Faith is put in machines and tools instead of how they are applied.

Clausewitz is by no means wrong or discredited. However, narrowly focusing on one aspect of warcraft can put blinders on, so to speak, and prevent generals from thinking as a winning force. Once this is understood, it becomes clear how the US military has engaged in ineffective combat since WWII.

https://youtu.be/pSF_UtEWnCg


The Triumvirate of mandatory volumes on warfare:

1. Art of War - Sun Tzu
-https://t.me/AdmiralsWarCollege/14

2. Vom Kriege (On War) - Carl Von Clausewitz
- https://t.me/AdmiralsWarCollege/40

3. Strategy, The Classic Book On Military Strategy - B.H. Liddell Hart
-https://t.me/AdmiralsWarCollege/49

These 3 volumes contain the trunk of warfare that the rest of our list will provide the branches and leaves for


This book is mandatory reading. Hart spends time blending the art of warfare dictated by Sun Tzu with the ferocity and general strategy of Clausewitz

While Clausewitz stated that "blood is the price of victory," Hart posits through an in depth study of historical battles from Greece to Napoleon to WWII, that it was rather an indirect approach to battle that led to victory. Indirectness being more effective at subduing your enemy than direct confrontation through battle. Whether it be through psychological or physical means, dislocating the joints of your enemy's defense leads overwhelmingly to victory in battle. One could consider this a "Judo" way of thinking about warfare.

This isn't a book on troop movements and logistics but rather a book for generals to begin to think "outside of the box" as it were. Learn to think in other, more intelligent ways. Learn to wage war efficiently and effectively to achieve total victory.




This is the classic book on war as we know it. During his long life, Basil H. Liddell Hart was considered one of the world's foremost military thinkers. In his writing, he stressed movement, flexibility, and surprise. He saw that in most military campaigns, it was vital to take an indirect approach. Rather than attacking the enemy head-on, one must dislocate their psychological and physical balance. With key examples from World War I and World War II (think trench warfare vs Blitzkreig), Liddell Hart defines the practical principles of waging war—“Adjust your end to your means,” “Take a line of operation which offers alternate objectives”—and proves they are as fundamental in the worlds of politics and business as they are in warfare.


"A dead soldier is a dead solider. One less man on the battlefield.

A demoralized soldier becomes an agent of fear spreading the pandemic of hopelessness amongst the ranks"

-B.H. Liddell Hart, The Classic Book On Military Strategy




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Personal
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Influence of Sea Power Upon History is mandatory reading. Alfred Thayer Manan is regarded by some to be one of the most influential strategists of the 19th century. He considered dominion of the seas to be the prime motivator of national interests as it's the means by which nations engage with each other and with themselves.

https://www.britannica.com/biography/Alfred-Thayer-Mahan


"It would seem improbable that a government in full accord with the natural bias of its people would most successfully advance its growth in every respect; and, in the matter of sea power, the most brilliant successes have followed where there has been intelligent direction by a government fully imbued with the spirit of the people and conscious of its true general bent. Such a government is most certainly secured when the will of the people, or of their best natural exponents, has some large share in making it"

-RADM Alfred Thayer Mahan, USN, The Influence of Sea Power Upon History




Vegetius' late Roman text became a well known and highly respected 'classic' in the Middle Ages, transformed by its readers into the authority on the waging of war. While emphasising that success depended on a commander's ability to outwit the enemy with a carefully selected, well trained and disciplined army, the De Re Militari inspired other unexpected developments, such as that of the 'national' army, and helped create a context in which the role of the soldier assumed greater social and political importance.




Carl von Clausewitz entered the Prussian military at the age of twelve as a Lance-Corporal and would go on to obtain the rank of Major-General. In “On War”, Clausewitz draws upon his experiences fighting in the French Revolution and Napoleonic Wars, as well as his military studies at the “Kriegsakademie”, or Prussian War Academy, which he would eventually become director of.

Clausewitz employs a dialectical approach to military analysis, which leads to frequent modern misinterpretation. Described as both a realist and a romantic, Clausewitz argued that war could not simply be reduced to the logistics on the ground but rather called for rapid decision making by alert commanders responding to unexpected developments unfolding under the “fog of war”. First published in 1832, “On War” is a mainstay of modern military colleges, a monumental work of military analysis and philosophy, which continues to be studied and interpreted to this day.


"We are not interested in generals who win victories without bloodshed. The fact that slaughter is a horrifying spectacle must make us take war more seriously, but not provide an excuse for gradually blunting our swords in the name of humanity. Sooner or later someone will come along with a sharp sword and hack off our arms."

-Carl von Clausewitz, Vom Krieg (On War)


"The mark of a great ship handler, is never getting into a situation requiring great ship handling"

-Admiral Ernest King, COMINCH-CNO WWII




The history of Sea Power is largely, though by no means solely, a narrative of contests between nations, of mutual rivalries, of violence frequently culminating in war. The profound influence of sea commerce upon the wealth and strength of countries was clearly seen long before the true principles which governed its growth and prosperity were detected. To secure to one's own people a disproportionate share of such benefits, every effort was made to exclude others, either by the peaceful legislative methods of monopoly or prohibitory regulations, or, when these failed, by direct violence. The clash of interests, the angry feelings roused by conflicting attempts thus to appropriate the larger share, if not the whole, of the advantages of commerce, and of distant unsettled commercial regions, led to wars.

On the other hand, wars arising from other causes have been greatly modified in their conduct and issue by the control of the sea. Therefore the history of sea power, while embracing in its broad sweep all that tends to make a people great upon the sea or by the sea, is largely a military history; and it is in this aspect that it will be mainly, though not exclusively, regarded in the following pages.
A study of the military history of the past, such as this, is enjoined by great military leaders as essential to correct ideas and to the skilful conduct of war in the future. Napoleon names among the campaigns to be studied by the aspiring soldier, those of Alexander, Hannibal, and Caesar, to whom gunpowder was unknown; and there is a substantial agreement among professional writers that, while many of the conditions of war vary from age to age with the progress of weapons, there are certain teachings in the school of history which remain constant, and being, therefore, of universal application, can be elevated to the rank of general principles.

For the same reason the study of the sea history of the past will be found instructive, by its illustration of the general principles of maritime war, notwithstanding the great changes that have been brought about in naval weapons by the scientific advances of the past half century, and by the introduction of steam as the motive power.

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