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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A good book to understand modern electronic battlefield, March 9, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Electronic Warfare in the Information Age (Artech House Radar Library) (Hardcover)
This is a good place to expanded your knowledge on the Electronic warfare side of a battle. The ins and outs of using Radio, Radar, TV to fight a modern 21st centruy battle. This book cover subjects such as how Command and Control works to how people using Signal intelligence(Sigint) and Electronic Intelligence (Elint) to find thier opponets Headquarters. As before this is a good book to expand your knowledge. Maybe not start, but at least to expand any knowledge you have
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Excellent, but compressed, November 10, 2001
This review is from: Electronic Warfare in the Information Age (Artech House Radar Library) (Hardcover)
This book brings the reader up to date on almost every aspect of modern Electronic Warfare, and is well worth reading.

But I must add two caveats. First, Schleher covers so much ground in one volume that a great deal of background material is necessarily left out. The reader needs to be reasonably familiar with military electronics and the relevant aspects of physics to understand a lot of the material presented here. Indeed,in a few places, such as the discussion in Section 8.1.1 of high-power microwave weapons, so much has been left out that I doubt whether anybody who lacks specialized knowledge of that particular topic can infer the implications of what Schleher says.

My second caveat is that, perhaps because of space limitations, the book contains essentially no material relating the great mass of technical information it provides to operational doctrine and the tactical implications of operational doctrine. Given that it's impossible to put all of the very latest-and-greatest technical innovations into every weapon and every platform (because it would cost too much, add too much weight, take up too much space, and make maintenance inordinately difficult) the choice of what to use where has to be made on the basis of how the platform or weapon is to be used, and that can only be determined by considering operational doctrine. Many engineers, and even some military personnel, tend to overlook this, so in a book like Schleher's it would be invaluable to have this relationship discussed. But it isn't.

However, I found the book fascinating and informative.

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2 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars electronic warfare re-tuned on information warfare principle, January 29, 2000
This review is from: Electronic Warfare in the Information Age (Artech House Radar Library) (Hardcover)
Tactical data links are the key elements for the evolution of EW systems performances inside a battlefield. "Dynamic libraries" of passive and active EW systems make those systems, "adaptive" to the threat environment, the variations of which run according to the INFORMATION playing in "real time".
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Electronic Warfare in the Information Age (Artech House Radar Library)
Electronic Warfare in the Information Age (Artech House Radar Library) by D. Curtis Schleher (Hardcover - June 30, 1999)
$166.00 $136.70
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