Amazon.com Review
This compendium of military mishaps (published in hardcover as
Days of Infamy) makes the case that poor decision-making often leads to catastrophe. In a series of short chapters ideal for subway rides and waiting rooms,
Michael Coffey shows how even relatively small misjudgments have become historical turning points. Many of his topics are familiar, such as how the Treaty of Versailles ending the World War I laid the groundwork for an even larger conflict 20 years later. Hitler's military miscalculations--thinking the British would negotiate a peace after Dunkirk, invading Russia, declaring war on the United States--receive prominent attention.
Allied leaders also committed plenty of blunders, such as the collapse of British defenses in Singapore and Malaysia, the fruitless bombing of Monte Cassino in Italy, and premature attempts to liberate Arnhem (the subject of the film A Bridge Too Far). More recent events are covered, too, including the Bay of Pigs, the disastrous mission in 1980 to free American prisoners in Iran, and Saddam Hussein's invasion of Kuwait in 1990. Some sections are much stronger than others, and readers already familiar with certain wars probably won't learn much from their coverage. Yet Coffey calls attention to an important consideration: mistakes are endemic in war, and victory often goes not to leaders who execute brilliantly planned maneuvers, but to those who simply avoid error. --John J. Miller
Product Description
The quintessential book for history buffslively, informative inside stories on more than 50 of the most disastrous military mishaps to occur in the past 100 yearsnow in paperback! From the assassination of the Archduke, through Hitlers rise and demise, to Saddam Husseins doomed invasion of KuwaitMilitary Blunders is a blow-by-blow account of this centurys most ill-fated military events. What were they and why did they happen?