Sir Lawrence Freedman is Emeritus Professor of War Studies at King's College London. He was the official historian of the Falklands Campaign, and a member of the official inquiry into Britain and the 2003 Iraq War ('the Chilcot Inquiry'). He has written extensively on nuclear strategy and the Cold War, and comments regularly on contemporary security issues. He is the author of The Future of War, Strategy, which was a Financial Times and Economist book of the year and A Choice of Enemies- America Confronts the Middle East, which won the 2009 Lionel Gelber Prize and Duke of Westminster Medal for Military Literature.
Lawrence Freedman is the dominant academic authority in Britain and
the English-speaking world on the way modern wars have been fought.
Rational, liberal-minded, clear-sighted, he has drawn on a lifetime
of experience for his new book. ... Command is the history of our
time, told through war. It's a wonderful, idiosyncratic feat of
storytelling as well as an essential account of how the modern
world's wars have been fought, written by someone whose grasp of
complex detail is as strong and effective as the clarity of his
style. I shall read it again and again.
*The Guardian*
superb study of high command and civil-military relations ... It is
simply one of the finest books I have read in ages, and full of
lessons for contemporary leaders. Highly recommended!
*Mick Ryan*
wise ... insightful ... masterly ... One suspects that this
well-researched, well-written and thought-provoking book will soon
be required reading for any Nato officer hoping to exercise high
command
*BBC History Magazine*
Freedman offers excellent concise summaries of some of the world's
main clashes since 1950 ... The author makes an encouraging point
when he concludes this useful book: "The advantages of democratic
systems lie not in their ability to avoid bad decisions, either by
governments or commanders . . . The advantage lies in their ability
to recognise these mistakes, learn and adapt. Closed systems, in
which subordinates dare not ask awkward questions . . . will suffer
operationally."
*Sunday Times*
Lawrence Freedman is one of our most distinguished military
historians. In this thoughtful book, drawing on decades of study,
he looks at the marriage of authorities that takes place in the
running of wars since 1945: where political power meets military
expertise, and who ends up having the final say. ... sumptuous ...
this should be the standard text in staff colleges around the
world, and for military-history studies.
*Daily Telegraph*
It is incredibly insightful, occasionally moving and profoundly
wise.
*Times Literary Supplement Books of the Year*
In this broad survey of command in war since 1945, Lawrence
Freedman brings to bear his extensive knowledge to explain the many
complexities commanders at the highest level must now face, from
grasping new ways of warfare to managing military organisation and
supply and, above all, coping with the mercurial behaviour of their
political masters. If there is a theme to Freedman's book, which
ranges from the Korean War to Putin's 'special military operation'
in Ukraine, it is to be found in the tensions and conflicts between
military leaders and the politicians who call the shots that he
documents. How often must a supreme commander have wished he were
free to do what he wanted? Usually, politics has to be factored in.
... One of the revelations of Freedman's detailed and well-informed
book is how difficult the management of conflict has become ...
[an] invaluable panorama of the challenges of modern command
*Literary Review*
Command is arguably his finest book - fluently written and
convincingly argued - into which he distils a lifetime of study
into the nature and practice of war.
*The Times*
Sir Lawrence Freedman, Britain's most distinguished scholar of war,
surveys 15 different battles and campaigns ... The lesson is that
good command looks both ways, sensitive to the politics raging
above while remaining in touch with the war being fought below.
*Economist*
comfortably the book of the year. It is a reminder of the human
factor as a central component of the so-called correlations of
forces in war.
*New Statesman Books of the Year*
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