1st Edition

Leaders in War West Point Remembers the 1991 Gulf War

Edited By Frederick W. Kagan, Christian Kubik Copyright 2005
    216 Pages
    by Routledge

    224 Pages
    by Routledge

    Leaders in War present unique first-person perspectives across the spectrum of American combat operations during the 1991 Persian Gulf War.

    From division commanders to platoon leaders, the authors deliver an insider's view of tough leadership challenges, tragic failures, and triumphant victories. Leaders in War captures the essence of the post-Cold War US Army: how an all-volunteer army, equipped with new weapons systems and adjusting to new battle doctrine, mounted one of history's most successful military campaigns.

    Described here are the details of the tremendous logistical challenges, innovations in intelligence, ground combat operations from platoon to division, and a wide range of combat support operations. Leaders in War focuses not just on the successes, but on the failures as well, in operations ranging from violent tank battles against the vaunted Iraqi Republican Guard to train-and-fill operations thousands of miles away. Leaders in War illustrates how US Army leaders adapted to the psychological strains of combat, the fog of war, unforeseeable challenges, and the fury of tank warfare during the Persian Gulf War.

    Foreword Dennis Showalter. Introduction Frederick W. Kagan Part 1: Senior Combat Commanders 1. Brigadier General John S. Brown 2. Major General Eric T. Olson 3. Lieutenant General (Retired) James Johnson Part 2: Combat Support and Combat Service Support at the Theater Level 4. Dr. (Lieutenant Colonel, Retired) Kent Laudeman 5. Colonel (Retired) Richard A. Pomager 6. Major Christine Carbone Sandoval Part 3: Junior Combat Commanders 7. Colonel H. R. McMaster 8. Major Jonathan J. Negin Part 4: Combat Support and Combat Service Support at the Tactical Level 9. Major Sandra L.Vann-Olejasz 10. Major Chris Kubik 11. Lieutenant Colonel Michael Huber 12. Major Chris Tatarka

    Biography

    Dr. Kagan is Associate Professor of Military History at the US Military Academy at West Point, NY. He has written extensively in the fields of military history and current American military policy including While America Sleeps: Self-Delusion, Military Weakness, and the Threat to Peace Today, (co-authored with Donald Kagan), St. Martin's Press, 2000; The Military History of Tsarist Russian and The Military History of the Soviet Union (co-edited with Robin Higham), Palgrave, 2002; and The Military Reforms of Nicholas I: The Origins of the Modern Russian Army, St. Martin's Press, 1999. He has also written extensively in The Wall Street Journal, Commentary, The Weekly Standard, and elsewhere.

    Major Kubik has spent more than two decades as a leader in the US Army. Enlisting in 1982, he served as a team leader, squad leader, and platoon sergeant in the Republic of Panama and in the USA. After commissioning, he served as a platoon leader in the Persian Gulf War and as a company commander in Croatia / Bosnia. He earned his Masters Degree in English at the University of Virginia and is currently an Assistant Professor of English at the US Military Academy, West Point, NY.