Mars Adapting: Military Change During War

Author:   Francis Hoffman
Publisher:   Naval Institute Press
ISBN:  

9781557502254


Pages:   368
Publication Date:   30 April 2024
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
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Mars Adapting: Military Change During War


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Author:   Francis Hoffman
Publisher:   Naval Institute Press
Imprint:   Naval Institute Press
Weight:   0.490kg
ISBN:  

9781557502254


ISBN 10:   1557502250
Pages:   368
Publication Date:   30 April 2024
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

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Reviews

A useful addition to professional military education for 21st-century decision-makers at all levels as they prepare their forces to Shape, Deter and Act. -- The Australian Naval Institute Hoffman's defense of his theory on adaption during war should be a required study.... The extensive case studies provide a novel insight to U.S. leadership's decision-making. -- StrategyPage This is a good book and worth reading. It continues the wider discussion on how militaries can learn rather than finishing [and] it has use for both the practitioner and the theoretician. -- The Naval Review This new book reveals how the United States military adapted to new and changing conditions during four conflicts, including how the United States conducted its submarine offensive in World War II, how airpower evolved during the Korean War, how the U.S. Army adapted to the conditions of the Vietnam War, and how the U.S. Marine Corps adapted to the fighting in AI Anbar province in Iraq. The author demonstrates how these military forces were compelled to change, and how the need to change can be difficult for the military to perceive and act upon in a timely fashion. -- Military Heritage In this original and important study, Frank Hoffman shows how a military's ability to adapt under fire is shaped by organisational capacities to learn lessons in war. With fascinating case studies of the U.S. armed services in World War II, Korea, Vietnam, and Iraq, this is an essential read for students of military innovation. --Theo Farrell, professor and deputy vice-chancellor, University of Wollongong and former head of the Department of War Studies, King's College London This work is going to become a classic of use to any of those who are interested in improving the performance of America's military institutions in war. Frank Hoffman has written an outstanding examination of the problems and issues involved in innovation and adaptation. His case studies come from all four of the U.S. services and provide wonderful insights into the actual difficulties that war presents to learning organizations. --Williamson Murray, professor emeritus at The Ohio State University An excellent work! Hoffman takes a refreshing view that balances military adaptation in wartime with substantial research from the field of organizational learning. This allows Hoffman to provide a new and extremely relevant perspective. Mars Adapting is an important contribution and essential reading for anyone interested in military adaptation. --Trent Hone, author of Learning War: The Evolution of Fighting Doctrine in the U.S. Navy, 1898-1945 and co-author of Battle Line: The United States Navy, 1919-1939 A useful addition to professional military education for 21st-century decision-makers at all levels as they prepare their forces to Shape, Deter and Act. --The Australian Naval Institute This new book reveals how the United States military adapted to new and changing conditions during four conflicts, including how the United States conducted its submarine offensive in World War II, how airpower evolved during the Korean War, how the U.S. Army adapted to the conditions of the Vietnam War, and how the U.S. Marine Corps adapted to the fighting in AI Anbar province in Iraq. The author demonstrates how these military forces were compelled to change, and how the need to change can be difficult for the military to perceive and act upon in a timely fashion. --Military Heritage Mars Adapting deserves close scrutiny, and readers will be amply rewarded for doing so.... Mars Adapting is required reading for all scholars and practitioners interested in the questions it raises. --Parameters Mars Adapting is recommended to all those interested in innovation issues and adaptation in armed conflict. --Politique etrangere This is a good book and worth reading. It continues the wider discussion on how militaries can learn rather than finishing [and] has use for both the practitioner and the theoretician. --The Naval Review Mars Adapting is a good primer to explore learning in the U.S. military case studies used. It is most useful to an American military reader given its focus on their armed forces. --The Wavell Room Hoffman's defense of his theory on adaption during war should be a required study.... The extensive case studies provide a novel insight to U.S. leadership's decision-making. --StrategyPage Hoffman's book offers a thought-provoking, cross-disciplinary theory and model for adaptation and innovation in wartime. -- Military History . . . although Hoffman primarily takes inspiration from previous literature, his ability to integrate different theoretical fields and produce a practical and sound model for a wide array of cases of military change makes this volume a masterpiece. Mars Adapting is a must-read for any military officer. Whether someone is finishing up their education, approaching their assignment, getting a promotion, or simply preparing to lead in combat, any officer needs Frank Hoffman's tools to become a better observer of the battlefield and sponsor of any necessary military change to achieve victory. As Hoffman shows, military change can follow different directions. Yet, the most successful way is to bring the expertise, experience, and ability of the personnel on the ground to the eyes and ears of the top brass in central command. -- Journal of Military and Strategic Studies Mars Adapting deserves close scrutiny, and readers will be amply rewarded for doing so.... Mars Adapting is required reading for all scholars and practitioners interested in the questions it raises. -- Parameters Mars Adapting is recommended to all those interested in innovation issues and adaptation in armed conflict. -- Politique etrangere


This is a good book and worth reading. It continues the wider discussion on how militaries can learn rather than finishing [and] it has use for both the practitioner and the theoretician. --The Naval Review A useful addition to professional military education for 21st-century decision-makers at all levels as they prepare their forces to Shape, Deter and Act. --The Australian Naval Institute Mars Adapting deserves close scrutiny, and readers will be amply rewarded for doing so.... Mars Adapting is required reading for all scholars and practitioners interested in the questions it raises. --Parameters Mars Adapting is recommended to all those interested in innovation issues and adaptation in armed conflict. --Politique etrangere This new book reveals how the United States military adapted to new and changing conditions during four conflicts, including how the United States conducted its submarine offensive in World War II, how airpower evolved during the Korean War, how the U.S. Army adapted to the conditions of the Vietnam War, and how the U.S. Marine Corps adapted to the fighting in AI Anbar province in Iraq. The author demonstrates how these military forces were compelled to change, and how the need to change can be difficult for the military to perceive and act upon in a timely fashion. --Military Heritage This work is going to become a classic of use to any of those who are interested in improving the performance of America's military institutions in war. Frank Hoffman has written an outstanding examination of the problems and issues involved in innovation and adaptation. His case studies come from all four of the U.S. services and provide wonderful insights into the actual difficulties that war presents to learning organizations. --Williamson Murray, professor emeritus at The Ohio State University An excellent work! Hoffman takes a refreshing view that balances military adaptation in wartime with substantial research from the field of organizational learning. This allows Hoffman to provide a new and extremely relevant perspective. Mars Adapting is an important contribution and essential reading for anyone interested in military adaptation. --Trent Hone, author of Learning War: The Evolution of Fighting Doctrine in the U.S. Navy, 1898-1945 and co-author of Battle Line: The United States Navy, 1919-1939 In this original and important study, Frank Hoffman shows how a military's ability to adapt under fire is shaped by organisational capacities to learn lessons in war. With fascinating case studies of the U.S. armed services in World War II, Korea, Vietnam, and Iraq, this is an essential read for students of military innovation. --Theo Farrell, professor and deputy vice-chancellor, University of Wollongong and former head of the Department of War Studies, King's College London


A useful addition to professional military education for 21st-century decision-makers at all levels as they prepare their forces to Shape, Deter and Act. -- The Australian Naval Institute Hoffman's defense of his theory on adaption during war should be a required study.... The extensive case studies provide a novel insight to U.S. leadership's decision-making. -- StrategyPage This is a good book and worth reading. It continues the wider discussion on how militaries can learn rather than finishing [and] it has use for both the practitioner and the theoretician. -- The Naval Review This new book reveals how the United States military adapted to new and changing conditions during four conflicts, including how the United States conducted its submarine offensive in World War II, how airpower evolved during the Korean War, how the U.S. Army adapted to the conditions of the Vietnam War, and how the U.S. Marine Corps adapted to the fighting in AI Anbar province in Iraq. The author demonstrates how these military forces were compelled to change, and how the need to change can be difficult for the military to perceive and act upon in a timely fashion. -- Military Heritage Mars Adapting deserves close scrutiny, and readers will be amply rewarded for doing so.... Mars Adapting is required reading for all scholars and practitioners interested in the questions it raises. -- Parameters Mars Adapting is recommended to all those interested in innovation issues and adaptation in armed conflict. -- Politique etrangere


Author Information

Frank Hoffman holds an appointment as a distinguished research fellow at the National Defense University in Washington, DC. He is a retired U.S. Marine infantry officer. His forty-two years in the U.S. defense establishment includes senior political appointments at the Pentagon, ten years at Headquarters Marine Corps, and a decade at NDU's Institute for National Strategic Studies. In addition to his research portfolio in strategy and military innovation, he has taught at the National War College. He earned his PhD in war studies from King's College, London.

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