American Airpower Strategy in World War II : Bombs, Cities, Civilians, and Oil - Conrad C. Crane

American Airpower Strategy in World War II

Bombs, Cities, Civilians, and Oil

By: Conrad C. Crane

Paperback | 5 April 2016

At a Glance

Paperback


$90.75

or 4 interest-free payments of $22.69 with

 or 

Aims to ship in 10 to 15 business days

Resistance is a product of will times means, Carl von Clausewitz postulated in his treatise On War. In his 1993 Bombs, Cities, and Civilians, which the American Historical Review judged "must reading for anyone interested in the subject of air warfare," Conrad C. Crane focused on the moral dimension of American air strategy in World War II--specifically, the Allied effort to break the enemy's will through targeting civilians. With decades of research and reflection, and a wealth of new material at his command, Crane returns to the subject of America's WWII airpower strategy to offer an analysis fully engaged with the "means" side of Clausewitz's equation: the design and impact of strategic bombing of the enemy's infrastructure and thus its capacity to fight.

A marked advance in our understanding of the use of airpower in war in general and the Second World War in particular, Crane's work shows how, despite an undeniable lack of concern about civilian casualties in Germany and Japan late in the war, American strategic bombing in WWII consistently focused on destroying the enemy's war-making capacity instead of its collapsing will. Further, Crane persuasively argues that in the limited wars since then, separating such targets has become increasingly more difficult, and all air campaigns against states have subsequently escalated to accept greater risks for civilians. American Airpower Strategy in World War II also provides an expanded close look at the use of airpower in the last three months of the strategic air war against Germany, when so many bombing missions relied upon radar aids, as well as the first direct comparison of 8th and 15th Air Force bombing campaigns in Europe.

The result is the most coherent and concise analysis of the application and legacy of Allied strategic airpower in WWII--and a work that will inform all future practical and theoretical consideration of the use, and the role, of airpower in war.

Industry Reviews
This is the definitive work on the moral, ethical, and practical considerations surrounding the American heavy-bomber effort during the Second World War." - Robert S. Ehlers, Jr. author of The Mediterranean Air War: Airpower and Allied Victory in World War II

"The book is now, more than ever, one of the essential works on American bombing in the Second World War." - Tami Davis Biddle, author of Rhetoric and Reality in Air Warfare

"Crane combines new findings, a complete grasp of the latest scholarship, and an awareness of the difficult choices facing military strategists. This will be one of the most significant air power books of the decade." - Richard R. Muller, USAF School of Advanced Air and Space Studies

More in General & World History

The Journals of Captain Cook : Penguin Classics - James Cook
The Times Complete History of the World - Richard Overy

RRP $225.00

$138.25

39%
OFF
The Art of War & Other Classics of Eastern Philosophy : Leather-bound Classics - Sun Tzu
The Golden Road : How Ancient India Transformed the World - William Dalrymple
The 1980s : Image of a Decade - Henry Carroll

RRP $90.00

$58.95

34%
OFF
Homo Deus : A Brief History of Tomorrow - Yuval Noah Harari

RRP $24.99

$23.75

Band of Brothers - Stephen E. Ambrose

RRP $24.99

$23.75

The End of Everything : How Wars Descend into Annihilation - Victor D Hanson
Unbroken : An Extraordinary True Story of Courage and Survival - Laura Hillenbrand