The Battle for Crete: When Airborne Warfare Changed Forever

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Bol In May 1941, German paratroopers descended on the island of Crete in the largest airborne operation the world had ever seen. Within ten days, they had captured the island, and within weeks, Adolf Hitler had quietly decided that nothing like it would ever be attempted again. The Battle for Crete examines this paradox: a tactical victory that closed a doctrinal door, an innovation proved and then abandoned by the very force that pioneered it. Hans Keller reconstructs the campaign with attention to planning, intelligence, and the unglamorous arithmetic of casualties, showing how a single battle can reshape the strategic imagination of an entire war.The book moves from the origins of German airborne doctrine through the precise hours at Maleme airfield, the naval engagements off the northern coast, the brutal march to Sphakia, and the long occupation that followed. It treats Ultra intelligence and the puzzle of warning without effective response, the limits of Allied air support, and the extraordinary participation of Cretan villagers who fought paratroopers with hunting rifles and farm tools. It also examines the divergent paths taken by German and Allied planners afterwards, as the same evidence produced opposite conclusions about the future of vertical envelopment. Throughout, Keller resists the temptation to assign simple blame or praise, focusing instead on the structural problems that commanders on both sides faced under genuine uncertainty.Written for general readers, students of strategy, and military analysts, the book offers a durable framework for thinking about military innovation under constraint. Readers will come away understanding why novelty alone does not determine the fate of a new method of war, why elite forces are particularly vulnerable to attritional shocks, and why the lessons of Crete still echo in contemporary debates about rapid-insertion forces and the defence of exposed positions. More than a campaign history, this is a study of how armies learn, fail to learn, and sometimes learn the wrong things from the battles they win.

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In May 1941, German paratroopers descended on the island of Crete in the largest airborne operation the world had ever seen. Within ten days, they had captured the island, and within weeks, Adolf Hitler had quietly decided that nothing like it would ever be attempted again. The Battle for Crete examines this paradox: a tactical victory that closed a doctrinal door, an innovation proved and then abandoned by the very force that pioneered it. Hans Keller reconstructs the campaign with attention to planning, intelligence, and the unglamorous arithmetic of casualties, showing how a single battle can reshape the strategic imagination of an entire war.The book moves from the origins of German airborne doctrine through the precise hours at Maleme airfield, the naval engagements off the northern coast, the brutal march to Sphakia, and the long occupation that followed. It treats Ultra intelligence and the puzzle of warning without effective response, the limits of Allied air support, and the extraordinary participation of Cretan villagers who fought paratroopers with hunting rifles and farm tools. It also examines the divergent paths taken by German and Allied planners afterwards, as the same evidence produced opposite conclusions about the future of vertical envelopment. Throughout, Keller resists the temptation to assign simple blame or praise, focusing instead on the structural problems that commanders on both sides faced under genuine uncertainty.Written for general readers, students of strategy, and military analysts, the book offers a durable framework for thinking about military innovation under constraint. Readers will come away understanding why novelty alone does not determine the fate of a new method of war, why elite forces are particularly vulnerable to attritional shocks, and why the lessons of Crete still echo in contemporary debates about rapid-insertion forces and the defence of exposed positions. More than a campaign history, this is a study of how armies learn, fail to learn, and sometimes learn the wrong things from the battles they win.

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Pagina's: 276, Hardcover, Vij Books India Private Limited


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Merk Vij Books India Private Limited
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