The Canon, continued
by
William S. Lind
by William S. Lind
This
column, the third in a series, concludes a discussion of the canon,
the seven books which, read in the order given, will take the reader
from the First Generation of modern war through the Fourth. As one
Marine Corps captain, an instructor at The Basic School, said, "Unless
the guy’s a rock, he can’t read these books in the right order and
not get it."
The
fifth book in the canon is again by Robert Doughty, the head of
the History Department at West Point and the best American historian
of the modern French army: The
Breaking Point. This is the story of the battle of Sedan
in 1940, where Guderian’s Panzers crossed the Meuse and then turned
and headed for the English Channel in a brilliant example of operational
art. Here, the reader sees the Second and Third Generations clash
head-on. Why does the Third Generation prevail? Because over and
over, at decisive moments the Third Generation Wehrmacht takes initiative
(often led by NCOs in doing so) while the French wait for orders.
What the French did was often right, but it was always too late.
The
sixth book in the canon is Martin van Creveld’s Fighting
Power, the second-best book by this brilliant Israeli military
historian. While The Breaking Point contrasts the Second
and Third Generations in combat, Fighting Power compares
them as institutions. It does so by contrasting the U.S. Army in
World War II with the German Wehrmacht. What emerges is a picture
of two radically different institutions, each consistent with its
doctrine. This book is important because it illustrates why you
cannot do what the U.S. military is now attempting, namely combine
Third Generation, maneuver warfare doctrine with a Second Generation,
inward-focused, process-ridden, centralized institution. If you
are a Marine, the next time the MAGTF Staff Training Program (MSTP)
visits your unit, you might want to throw a copy of Fighting
Power at them – hard.
The
seventh and final book in the canon is van Creveld’s finest work
to date, The
Transformation of War. Easily the most important book on
war written in the last quarter-century, Transformation lays
out the basis of Fourth Generation war, the state’s loss of its
monopoly on war and on social organization. In the 21st
century, as in all centuries up to the rise of the state, many different
entities will fight war, for many different reasons, not just raison
d’etat. Clausewitz’s "trinity" of people, government
and army vanishes, as the elements disappear or become indistinguishable
from one another. Van Creveld’s term for what I call Fourth Generation
war is non-trinitarian warfare. He subsequently wrote another book,
The
Rise and Decline of the State, which lays out the historical
basis of the theory in Transformation.
These
seven books constitute the canon. But there is one I am tempted
to add, for naval audiences; Andrew Gordon’s The
Rules of the Game. The canon is based on land warfare, but
the same elements we see in the First, Second and Third Generations
also exist in naval warfare, although their development follows
different patterns. In the second half of the 18th century,
the Royal Navy developed and institutionalized Third Generation
war – then loses it again in the 19th century. The
Rules of the Game explains how and why they lost it. At the
heart of the matter lies signaling, and the illusion that advances
in signaling permit effective centralization – a point of some relevance
today as our military services drown in a tsunami of computers and
video screens. It is a point Gordon does not miss.
As
I said at the outset, what the canon (plus Gordon) offer is an intellectual
framework, a construct the reader can use to make sense of events
and discern larger patterns in them. There can, of course, be other
frameworks, although I would urge caution toward those based on
simple technological determinism (on that, see van Creveld’s Technology
and War). But without a framework of some sort, both history
and current developments in war tend to appear chaotic. Soldiers
as well as scholars need a framework if they are to make sense out
of the world around them. The canon offers the best framework I
know.
June
26, 2004
William
Lind [send him mail]
is Director of the Center for Cultural Conservatism at the Free
Congress Foundation.
Copyright
© 2004 William S. Lind
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Lind Archives
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