A Model For Modern Nonlinear Noncontiguous Operations: The War In Burma, 1943 To 1945

Nonfiction, History, Germany, European General, Military, United States
Cover of the book A Model For Modern Nonlinear Noncontiguous Operations: The War In Burma, 1943 To 1945 by Major John Atkins RLC, Verdun Press
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Major John Atkins RLC ISBN: 9781782893752
Publisher: Verdun Press Publication: August 15, 2014
Imprint: Verdun Press Language: English
Author: Major John Atkins RLC
ISBN: 9781782893752
Publisher: Verdun Press
Publication: August 15, 2014
Imprint: Verdun Press
Language: English

The War in Burma is all too frequently forgotten as a source of relevant military experience. Admittedly it did not have the strategic importance of other theatres such as the Pacific or North West Europe, but it did witness some of the hardest and most bitter fighting of the War. Because of the nature of the terrain, limited allied resources and the type of dispersed operations conducted by the enemy, Allied forces were forced to adapt a new method of warfighting to counter these difficulties. The aircraft and the radio revolutionised the way that the campaign was to be conducted. It was discovered for the first time that formations could be dispersed across the battlespace and could fight independently of a ground line of communication.
The first formation to prove that this approach was possible was the 77th Brigade, later to earn the title of Chindits and commanded by Brigadier Orde Wingate. Employing Wingate’s theories of Long Range Penetration for the first time, the Chindits travelled hundreds of miles behind the enemy’s forward positions and attacked his rear areas and lines of communication. Throughout the operation, they received all their supply requirements from transport aircraft and were never in physical contact with friendly forces. The Chindits conducted a truly joint, mobile, nonlinear and noncontiguous operation. Within a year, conventional brigades, divisions and corps of the British Fourteenth Army and the American/Chinese forces in northern Burma were conducting similar operations, this time supported by many more aircraft for both logistic sustainment and fires. Field Marshall William Slim called it a new way of fighting and suggested that four elements contributed to the new concept: joint operations, the use of mission command, the reduction of the logistic footprint of the force to increase tempo, and the conduct of operations by dispersed forces which are tactically independent but focused on operational-level objectives.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

The War in Burma is all too frequently forgotten as a source of relevant military experience. Admittedly it did not have the strategic importance of other theatres such as the Pacific or North West Europe, but it did witness some of the hardest and most bitter fighting of the War. Because of the nature of the terrain, limited allied resources and the type of dispersed operations conducted by the enemy, Allied forces were forced to adapt a new method of warfighting to counter these difficulties. The aircraft and the radio revolutionised the way that the campaign was to be conducted. It was discovered for the first time that formations could be dispersed across the battlespace and could fight independently of a ground line of communication.
The first formation to prove that this approach was possible was the 77th Brigade, later to earn the title of Chindits and commanded by Brigadier Orde Wingate. Employing Wingate’s theories of Long Range Penetration for the first time, the Chindits travelled hundreds of miles behind the enemy’s forward positions and attacked his rear areas and lines of communication. Throughout the operation, they received all their supply requirements from transport aircraft and were never in physical contact with friendly forces. The Chindits conducted a truly joint, mobile, nonlinear and noncontiguous operation. Within a year, conventional brigades, divisions and corps of the British Fourteenth Army and the American/Chinese forces in northern Burma were conducting similar operations, this time supported by many more aircraft for both logistic sustainment and fires. Field Marshall William Slim called it a new way of fighting and suggested that four elements contributed to the new concept: joint operations, the use of mission command, the reduction of the logistic footprint of the force to increase tempo, and the conduct of operations by dispersed forces which are tactically independent but focused on operational-level objectives.

More books from Verdun Press

Cover of the book Back From The Living Dead: by Major John Atkins RLC
Cover of the book United States Army in WWII - the Pacific - Okinawa: the Last Battle by Major John Atkins RLC
Cover of the book World War I Leadership Characteristics That Could Make Future Military Leaders Successful by Major John Atkins RLC
Cover of the book Haig At Cambrai: Lessons In Operational Leadership by Major John Atkins RLC
Cover of the book United States Army in WWII - the Pacific - Leyte: the Return to the Philippines by Major John Atkins RLC
Cover of the book Slim Chance: The Pivotal Role Of Air Mobility In The Burma Campaign by Major John Atkins RLC
Cover of the book Give Us This Day [Illustrated Edition] by Major John Atkins RLC
Cover of the book Samurai! [Illustrated Edition] by Major John Atkins RLC
Cover of the book Marines In World War II - The Campaign On New Britain [Illustrated Edition] by Major John Atkins RLC
Cover of the book Specialized Assault Units Of The World War I Western Front: by Major John Atkins RLC
Cover of the book Held To A Higher Standard: The Downfall Of Admiral Kimmel by Major John Atkins RLC
Cover of the book Operation Stalemate II by Major John Atkins RLC
Cover of the book Selected Readings in the History of Soviet Operational Art by Major John Atkins RLC
Cover of the book Marshal Ferdinand Foch, His Life and His Theory of Modern War by Major John Atkins RLC
Cover of the book March On Paris And The Battle Of The Marne 1914 by Major John Atkins RLC
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy