
Kleinkrieg
The German Experience with Guerrilla Wars, from Clausewitz to Hitler
- 216 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
In recent years the great powers of the Westâprimarily the US and UKâhave most often been relegated to fighting "small wars, " rather than the great confrontational battles for which they once prepared. It has been a difficult process, with some conflicts increasingly being seen as unwinnable, or at least not worth the effort in treasure and blood, even as the geopolitical structure of the world appears to slip. It is thus worth paying heed now, to the experiences of another power which once encountered the same problems. This work examines the German analysis to the problem, covering their experiences from the Napoleonic era to the Third Reich. Though the latter regime, the most despicable in history, needed to be destroyed by US/UK conventional force, as well as that of the Soviets, the German military meantime provided analysis to the question of grassrootsâas opposed to great-powerâwarfare. This work is built around the historical analysis titled Kleinkrieg, provided to the German High Command by Arthur Earhardt in 1935 (republished in 1942 and 1943) which examined insurgencies from French-occupied Spain to recurrent problems in the Balkans. It also calls upon the Bandenbekampfung (Fighting the Guerilla Bands) document provided to Germany's OKW in 1944. In both, conditions that were specific to broader military operations were separated from circumstances in occupation campaigns, and new background in the German experience in suppressing rebellion in World War II is presented. Edited and annotated, along with new analysis, by Charles D. Melson, former Chief Historian for the U.S. Marine Corps, Kleinkrieg expands our knowledge of the Western experience in coping with insurgencies. Without partaking in ideological biases, this work examines the purely military problem as seen by professionals. While small wars are not new, how they should be fought by a modern industrial nation is still a question to be answered. Rediscovered and presented in English, these German thoughts on the issue are now made available to a new generation of guerilla and irregular war fighters in the West.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title
- Copyright
- Contents
- Foreword
- Editorâs Preface
- PART ONE German Counterinsurgency Revisited
- PART TWO Kleinkrieg: Lessons from the Past and Possibilities of the Future
- PART THREE Kleinkrieg to Bandenbekaempfung
- PART FOUR Fighting the Guerrilla Bands
- PART FIVE Small War Legacies
- Notes