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Carnage and Culture: Landmark Battles in the Rise to Western Power Kindle Edition
Looking beyond popular explanations such as geography or superior technology, Hanson argues that it is in fact Western culture and values–the tradition of dissent, the value placed on inventiveness and adaptation, the concept of citizenship–which have consistently produced superior arms and soldiers. Offering riveting battle narratives and a balanced perspective that avoids simple triumphalism, Carnage and Culture demonstrates how armies cannot be separated from the cultures that produce them and explains why an army produced by a free culture will always have the advantage.
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherAnchor
- Publication dateDecember 18, 2007
- File size4480 KB
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Though technological advances and superior weapons have certainly played a role in Western military dominance, Hanson posits that cultural distinctions are the most significant factors. By bringing personal freedom, discipline, and organization to the battlefield, powerful "marching democracies" were more apt to defeat non-Western nations hampered by unstable governments, limited funding, and intolerance of open discussion. These crucial differences often ensured victory even against long odds. Greek armies, for instance, who elected their own generals and freely debated strategy were able to win wars even when far outnumbered and deep within enemy territory. Hanson further argues that granting warriors control of their own destinies results in the kind of glorification of horrific hand-to-hand combat necessary for true domination.
The nine battles Hanson examines include the Greek naval victory against the Persians at Salamis in 480 B.C., Cortes's march on Mexico City in 1521, the battle of Midway in 1942, and the 1968 Tet Offensive in Vietnam. In the book's fascinating final chapter, he then looks forward and ponders the consequences of a complete cultural victory, challenging the widespread belief that democratic nations do not wage war against one another: "We may well be all Westerners in the millennium to come, and that could be a very dangerous thing indeed," he writes. It seems the West will always seek an enemy, even if it must come from within. --Shawn Carkonen
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Review
“No one offers a more compelling picture of how wars reflect and affect the societies, including our own, that wage them.” —National Review
“Hanson . . . is becoming one of the best-known historians in America . . . [Carnage and Culture] can only enhance his reputation.” —John Keegan, Daily Telegraph (London)
“Victor Davis Hanson is courting controversy again with another highly readable, lucid work. Together with John Keegan, he is our most interesting historian of war.” —Jean Bethke Elshtain, author of Women and War
From the Trade Paperback edition.
From the Inside Flap
Looking beyond popular explanations such as geography or superior technology, Hanson argues that it is in fact Western culture and values the tradition of dissent, the value placed on inventiveness and adaptation, the concept of citizenship which have consistently produced superior arms and soldiers. Offering riveting battle narratives and a balanced perspective that avoids simple triumphalism, Carnage and Culture demonstrates how armies cannot be separated from the cultures that produce them and explains why an army produced by a free culture will always have the advantage.
From the Back Cover
Looking beyond popular explanations such as geography or superior technology, Hanson argues that it is in fact Western culture and values–the tradition of dissent, the value placed on inventiveness and adaptation, the concept of citizenship–which have consistently produced superior arms and soldiers. Offering riveting battle narratives and a balanced perspective that avoids simple triumphalism, Carnage and Culture demonstrates how armies cannot be separated from the cultures that produce them and explains why an army produced by a free culture will always have the advantage.
About the Author
Victor Davis Hanson is the Martin and Illie Anderson Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University. He is a recipient of the National Humanities Medal. His many books include A War Like No Other and Between War and Peace. He is a syndicated columnist for Tribune Media Services and is the current codirector of the group on military history and contemporary conflict at the Hoover Institution.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Why the West Has Won
When the trumpet sounded, the soldiers took up their arms and went out. As they charged faster and faster, they gave a loud cry, and on their own broke into a run toward the camp. But a great fear took hold of the barbarian hosts; the Cilician queen fled outright in her carriage, and those in the market threw down their wares and also took to flight. At that point, the Greeks in great laughter approached the camp. And the Cilician queen was filled with admiration at the brilliant spectacle and order of the phalanx; and Cyrus was delighted to see the abject terror of the barbarians when they saw the Greeks.
--Xenophon, Anabasis (1.2.16-18)
ENLIGHTENED THUGS
EVEN THE PLIGHT of enterprising killers can tell us something. In the summer of 401 b.c., 10,700 Greek hoplite soldiers--infantrymen heavily armed with spear, shield, and body armor--were hired by Cyrus the Younger to help press his claim to the Persian throne. The recruits were in large part battle-hardened veterans of the prior twenty-seven-year Peloponnesian War (431-404 b.c.). As mercenaries, they were mustered from throughout the Greek-speaking world. Many were murderous renegades and exiles. Both near adolescents and the still hale in late middle age enlisted for pay. Large numbers were unemployed and desperate at any cost for lucrative work as killers in the exhausted aftermath of the internecine war that had nearly ruined the Greek world. Yet there were also a few privileged students of philosophy and oratory in the ranks, who would march into Asia side by side these destitute mercenaries--aristocrats like Xenophon, student of Socrates, and Proxenus, the Boeotian general, as well as physicians, professional officers, would-be colonists, and wealthy Greek friends of Prince Cyrus.
After a successful eastward march of more than 1,500 miles that scattered all opposition, the Greeks smashed through the royal Persian line at the battle of Cunaxa, north of Babylon. The price for destroying an entire wing of the Persian army was a single Greek hoplite wounded by an arrow. The victory of the Ten Thousand in the climactic showdown for the Persian throne, however, was wasted when their employer, Cyrus, rashly pursued his brother, Artaxerxes, across the battle line and was cut down by the Persian imperial guard.
Suddenly confronted by a host of enemies and hostile former allies, stranded far from home without money, guides, provisions, or the would-be king, and without ample cavalry or missile troops, the orphaned Greek expeditionary infantrymen nevertheless voted not to surrender to the Persian monarchy. Instead, they prepared to fight their way back to the Greek world. That brutal trek northward through Asia to the shores of the Black Sea forms the centerpiece of Xenophon's Anabasis ("The March Up-Country"), the author himself one of the leaders of the retreating Ten Thousand.
Though surrounded by thousands of enemies, their original generals captured and beheaded, forced to traverse through the contested lands of more than twenty different peoples, caught in snowdrifts, high mountain passes, and waterless steppes, suffering frostbite, malnutrition, and frequent sickness, as well as fighting various savage tribesmen, the Greeks reached the safety of the Black Sea largely intact--less than a year and a half after leaving home. They had routed every hostile Asian force in their way. Five out of six made it out alive, the majority of the dead lost not in battle, but in the high snows of Armenia.
During their ordeal, the Ten Thousand were dumbfounded by the Taochians, whose women and children jumped off the high cliffs of their village in a ritual mass suicide. They found the barbaric white-skinned Mossynoecians, who engaged in sexual intercourse openly in public, equally baffling. The Chalybians traveled with the heads of their slain opponents. Even the royal army of Persia appeared strange; its pursuing infantry, sometimes whipped on by their officers, fled at the first onslaught of the Greek phalanx. What ultimately strikes the reader of the Anabasis is not merely the courage, skill, and brutality of the Greek army--which after all had no business in Asia other than killing and money--but the vast cultural divide between the Ten Thousand and the brave tribes they fought.
Where else in the Mediterranean would philosophers and students of rhetoric march in file alongside cutthroats to crash headlong into enemy flesh? Where else would every man under arms feel equal to anyone else in the army--or at least see himself as free and in control of his own destiny? What other army of the ancient world elected its own leaders? And how could such a small force by elected committee navigate its way thousands of miles home amid thousands of hostile enemies?
Once the Ten Thousand, as much a "marching democracy" as a hired army, left the battlefield of Cunaxa, the soldiers routinely held assemblies in which they voted on the proposals of their elected leaders. In times of crises, they formed ad hoc boards to ensure that there were sufficient archers, cavalry, and medical corpsmen. When faced with a variety of unexpected challenges both natural and human--impassable rivers, a dearth of food, and unfamiliar tribal enemies--councils were held to debate and discuss new tactics, craft new weapons, and adopt modifications in organization. The elected generals marched and fought alongside their men--and were careful to provide a fiscal account of their expenditures.
The soldiers in the ranks sought face-to-face shock battle with their enemies. All accepted the need for strict discipline and fought shoulder-to-shoulder whenever practicable. Despite their own critical shortage of mounted troops, they nevertheless felt only disdain for the cavalry of the Great King. "No one ever died in battle from the bite or kick of a horse," Xenophon reminded his beleaguered foot soldiers (Anabasis 3.2.19). Upon reaching the coast of the Black Sea, the Ten Thousand conducted judicial inquiries and audits of its leadership's performance during the past year, while disgruntled individuals freely voted to split apart and make their own way back home. A lowly Arcadian shepherd had the same vote as the aristocratic Xenophon, student of Socrates, soon-to-be author of treatises ranging from moral philosophy to the income potential of ancient Athens.
To envision the equivalent of a Persian Ten Thousand is impossible. Imagine the likelihood of the Persian king's elite force of heavy infantry--the so-called Immortals, or Amrtaka, who likewise numbered 10,000--outnumbered ten to one, cut off and abandoned in Greece, marching from the Peloponnese to Thessaly, defeating the numerically superior phalanxes of every Greek city-state they invaded, as they reached the safety of the Hellespont. History offers a more tragic and real-life parallel: the Persian general Mardonius's huge invasion army of 479 b.c. that was defeated by the numerically inferior Greeks at the battle of Plataea and then forced to retire home three hundred miles northward through Thessaly and Thrace. Despite the army's enormous size and the absence of any organized pursuit, few of the Persians ever returned home. They were clearly no Ten Thousand. Their king had long ago abandoned them; after his defeat at Salamis, Xerxes had marched back to the safety of his court the prior autumn.
Technological superiority does not in itself explain the miraculous Greek achievement, although Xenophon at various places suggests that the Ten Thousand's heavy bronze, wood, and iron panoply was unmatched by anything found in Asia. There is no evidence either that the Greeks were by nature "different" from King Artaxerxes' men. The later pseudoscientific notion that the Europeans were racially superior to the Persians was entertained by no Greeks of the time. Although they were mercenary veterans and bent on booty and theft, the Ten Thousand were no more savage or warlike than other raiders and plunderers of the time; much less were they kinder or more moral people than the tribes they met in Asia. Greek religion did not put a high premium on turning the other cheek or on a belief that war per se was either abnormal or amoral. Climate, geography, and natural resources tell us as little. In fact, Xenophon's men could only envy the inhabitants of Asia Minor, whose arable land and natural wealth were in dire contrast to their poor soil back in Greece. Indeed, they warned their men that any Greeks who migrated eastward might become lethargic "Lotus-Eaters" in such a far wealthier natural landscape.
The Anabasis makes it clear, however, that the Greeks fought much differently than their adversaries and that such unique Hellenic characteristics of battle--a sense of personal freedom, superior discipline, matchless weapons, egalitarian camaraderie, individual initiative, constant tactical adaptation and flexibility, preference for shock battle of heavy infantry--were themselves the murderous dividends of Hellenic culture at large. The peculiar way Greeks killed grew out of consensual government, equality among the middling classes, civilian audit of military affairs, and politics apart from religion, freedom and individualism, and rationalism. The ordeal of the Ten Thousand, when stranded and near extinction, brought out the polis that was innate in all Greek soldiers, who then conducted themselves on campaign precisely as civilians in their respective city-states.
In some form or another, the Ten Thousand would be followed by equally brutal European intruders: Agesilaus and his Spartans, Chares the mercenary captain, Alexander the Great, Julius Caesar and centuries of legionary dominance, the Crusaders, Hernan Cortes, Portuguese explorers in Asiatic seas, British redcoats in India and Africa, and scores of other thieves, buccaneers, colonists, mercenaries, imperialists, and explorers. Most subsequent Western expeditionary forces were outnumbered and often deployed far from home. Nevertheless, they outfought their numerically superior enemies and in varying degrees drew on elements of Western culture to slaughter mercilessly their opponents.
In the long history of European military practice, it is almost a truism that the chief military worry of a Western army for the past 2,500 years was another Western army. Few Greeks were killed at Marathon (490 b.c.). Thousands died at the later collisions at Nemea and Coronea (394 b.c.), where Greek fought Greek. The latter Persian Wars (480-479 b.c.) saw relatively few Greek deaths. The Peloponnesian War (431-404 b.c.) between Greek states was an abject bloodbath. Alexander himself killed more Europeans in Asia than did the hundreds of thousands of Persians under Darius III. The Roman Civil Wars nearly ruined the republic in a way that even Hannibal had not. Waterloo, the Somme, and Omaha Beach only confirm the holocaust that occurs when Westerner meets Westerner.
This book attempts to explain why that is all so, why Westerners have been so adept at using their civilization to kill others--at warring so brutally, so often without being killed. Past, present, and future, the story of military dynamism in the world is ultimately an investigation into the prowess of Western arms. Scholars of war may resent such a broad generalization. Academics in the university will find that assertion chauvinistic or worse--and thus cite every exception from Thermopylae to Little Big Horn in refutation. The general public itself is mostly unaware of their culture's own singular and continuous lethality in arms. Yet for the past 2,500 years--even in the Dark Ages, well before the "Military Revolution," and not simply as a result of the Renaissance, the European discovery of the Americas, or the Industrial Revolution--there has been a peculiar practice of Western warfare, a common foundation and continual way of fighting, that has made Europeans the most deadly soldiers in the history of civilization.
THE PRIMACY OF BATTLE
War as Culture
I am not interested here in whether European military culture is morally superior to, or far more wretched than, that of the non-West. The conquistadors, who put an end to human sacrifice and torture on the Great Pyramid in Mexico City, sailed from a society reeling from the Grand Inquisition and the ferocious Reconquista, and left a diseased and nearly ruined New World in their wake. I am also less concerned in ascertaining the righteousness of particular wars--whether a murderous Pizarro in Peru (who calmly announced, "The time of the Inca is over") was better or worse than his murdering Inca enemies, whether India suffered enormously or benefited modestly from English colonization, or whether the Japanese had good cause to bomb Pearl Harbor or the Americans to incinerate Tokyo. My curiosity is not with Western man's heart of darkness, but with his ability to fight--specifically how his military prowess reflects larger social, economic, political, and cultural practices that themselves seemingly have little to do with war.
That connection between values and battle is not original, but has an ancient pedigree. The Greek historians, whose narratives are centered on war, nearly always sought to draw cultural lessons. In Thucydides' history of the Peloponnesian War, nearly 2,500 years ago the Spartan general Brasidas dismissed the military prowess of the tribes of Illyria and Macedonia, who confronted his Spartan hoplites. These men, Brasidas says of his savage opponents, have no discipline and so cannot endure shock battle. "As all mobs do," they changed their fearsome demeanor to cries of fright when they faced the cold iron of disciplined men in rank. Why so? Because, as Brasidas goes on to tell his soldiers, such tribes are the product of cultures "in which the many do not rule the few, but rather the few the many" (Thucydides 4.126).
In contrast to these enormous armies of screaming "barbarians" without consensual governments and written constitutions--"formidable in outward bulk, with unbearable loud yelling and the frightful appearance of weapons brandished in the air"--"citizens of states like yours," Brasidas assures his men, "stand their ground." Notice that Brasidas says nothing about skin color, race, or religion. Instead, he simplistically connects military discipline, fighting in rank, and the preference for shock battle with the existence of popular and consensual government, which gave the average infantryman in the phalanx a sense of equality and a superior spirit to his enemies. Whether or not we wish to dismiss Brasidas's self-serving portrait of frenzied tribesmen as a chauvinistic Western "construct" or "fiction," or debate whether his own Spartan oligarchy was a broad-based government, or carp that European infantrymen were often ambushed and bushwhacked by more nimble guerrillas, it is indisputable that there was a tradition of disciplined heavy infantrymen among the constitutionally governed Greek city-states, and not such a thing among tribal peoples to the north.
In an analysis of culture and conflict why should we concentrate on a few hours of battle and the fighting experience of the average soldier--and not the epic sweep of wars, with their cargo of grand strategy, tactical maneuver, and vast theater operations that so much better lend themselves to careful social and cultural exegesis? Military history must never stray from the tragic story of killing, which is ultimately found only in battle. The culture in which militaries fight determines whether thousands of mostly innocent young men are alive or rotting after their appointed hour of battle. Abstractions like capitalism or civic militarism are hardly abstract at all when it comes to battle, but rather concrete realities that ultimately determined whether at Lepanto twenty-year-old Turkish peasants survived or were harpooned in the thousands, whether Athenian cobblers and tanners could return home in safety after doing their butchery at Salamis or were to wash up in chunks on the shores of Attica.
Product details
- ASIN : B0012D1D7S
- Publisher : Anchor; 1st edition (December 18, 2007)
- Publication date : December 18, 2007
- Language : English
- File size : 4480 KB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Sticky notes : On Kindle Scribe
- Print length : 546 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #110,070 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #8 in Non-US Legal Systems (Kindle Store)
- #23 in Non-US Legal Systems (Books)
- #38 in Comparative Politics
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About the author

Victor Davis Hanson is a senior fellow in military history and classics at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University and a professor emeritus of classics at California State University, Fresno. He is the author of over two dozen books, including The Second World Wars, The Dying Citizen, and The End of Everything. He lives in Selma, California.
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Customers find the book an interesting read with vivid, novel-like descriptions of the nine battles. They also appreciate the author's understanding of each period and the suitably large bibliography. Readers describe the book as well-written, entertaining, and brilliant.
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Customers find the book interesting, thought-provoking, and engaging. They also appreciate the vivid, novel-like descriptions of the nine battles. Readers also say the book is well-written, well-argued, and well-researched.
"...Suffice to say that the author makes his point in a systematic, entertaining, and brilliant fashion. One last thing I will add is that while..." Read more
"This book gives a completed thought, extensive thought, to the question, why wars! My education continues with the best of the best instructors!..." Read more
"...In addition to an interesting and well-supported theory of warfare, what makes Carnage and Culture a delight to read is Hanson's narrative gifts...." Read more
"...He is clear, precise, and careful in his words. All in all, a remarkable book. Read it and your mind will be inbiggened." Read more
Customers find the content interesting, straightforward, and unmistakable. They also say the author provides a convincing argument and precise, vivid descriptions of conflicts from early Greek city-states time all the way to the modern era. Readers describe the book as brilliant, excellent, and timeless in its message. They mention that the bibliography is suitably large for the subject matter.
"...Suffice to say that the author makes his point in a systematic, entertaining, and brilliant fashion. One last thing I will add is that while..." Read more
"...If you are interested in the subject, Hanson is through and convincing...." Read more
"...agree with the thesis, but what really matters is whether it's cogently argued and easily accessible...." Read more
"...The book "Carnage and Culture" is an excellent primer on conflicts...." Read more
Customers find the book very well written, clear, precise, and careful in his words. They also say it's an articulate depiction of why the war tore at America's conscience.
"...the author makes his point in a systematic, entertaining, and brilliant fashion. One last thing I will add is that while many books about war..." Read more
"...His style is lucid and conversational without being florid or pedantic...." Read more
"...He is clear, precise, and careful in his words. All in all, a remarkable book. Read it and your mind will be inbiggened." Read more
"...Hanson, like always, has written an engaging book. It is highly readable, and though Hanson turns a tad repetitive before his work is done, he moves..." Read more
Customers find the ideas in the book challenging and thought provoking.
"...But that's what Hanson attempts here. That attempt is audacious -- and also successful...." Read more
"I thoroughly enjoyed this book. A captivating way to propose and defend the theory that culture plays a large part in the successes of the Western..." Read more
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"...Certainly interesting and challenging" Read more
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The general premise of this book is that certain aspects of western culture have given the western world certain key advantages when fighting opposing armies, specifically the rationalist mindset, a proclivity for innovation, free debate, a focus on organizational discipline ect. Some people may look at that summary and decry it as racists or imperialist, however the author quite commonly applauds the courage and bravery of many of the non western peoples from the Aztecs to the Zulus. His point is that because western notions about how to fight a war, i.e. through, direct "shock" engagements, designed to annihilate opposition, were so different from many other cultures, i.e. at the other extreme, the Aztecs waged war to capture prisoners for human sacrifice, and often battles were ceremonial lasting for perhaps a day, after which both sides went home largely unmolested. These radically different ideas on how to conduct warfare, helped to provide people like Cortez significant advantages that grew entirely out of how they viewed the world and the purpose of warfare. In fact the author cites multiple occasions where the Aztecs might have killed Cortex but instead tried to capture him for sacrifice. Had they simply killed Cortez and his men, like the French or British probably would have done, then they might not have been wiped out so easily, given their vast numerical advantage. I could give more examples, but then i would just be retyping the entire book. Suffice to say that the author makes his point in a systematic, entertaining, and brilliant fashion.
One last thing I will add is that while many books about war, are naturally one sided, and tend to portray the victors as righteous heroes while the defeated are vilified, I found essentially no instances of this happening in this book. The author is quick to point out the moral and ethical flaws of both sides. For example, he mentions the racism and brutality towards prisoners characteristic of the Japaneses in World War 2, but also talks about the firebombing of Tokyo that killed thousands of innocents. In my opinion it is a fairly balanced reading of history, abet one with a point, but balanced nonetheless. At the end you are left with the conclusions that no one is truly innocent in war, but at the same time, uniquely western cultural assumptions and developments have helped to given them a decisive edge.
There are certainly exceptions to this rule in history, usually due to overwhelming numbers (eg, Ukraine vs. Russia today). The notable point is that Western democracy and valuation of the individual probable has given its warfare an edge over societies without those principles.
If you are interested in the subject, Hanson is through and convincing. But his canon includes many easier to read and more wide-ranging topics that a casual reader may find more digestible. Still, my admiration for VDH's knowledge and perceptivity is undiminished. Whether or not you read this book, read Victor Davis Hanson.
Going in I had no bias one way or another, except that, like Hanson, I despise cultural relativism, and I start with the premise that history is dialectical, i.e. history is the narrative of conflict. Usually (but not always) historical conflict manifests itself as war, and war is indeed what Hanson addresses. Hanson maintains not only that the West has been ascendent in warfare vis-a-vis non-Western powers but that this success is due to methods of warfare which in turn arise from Western cultural values.
The wonderful thing about Hanson's thesis is that it is not exclusionary, it can exist alongside other theses which explain the ascendancy of the West, say, the Great Man thesis , or the Christian missionary thesis, or (though Hanson doesn't seem to like it) Jared Diamond's "Guns, Germs and Steel" environmental thesis. Why did the Greeks defeat the Persians? The Franks the Saracens at Poitiers? The Americans the Japanese? Hanson maintains that there's a common factor to these victories, and it has to do with the way Western cultural values make men fight. He doesn't gloss over the defeats, but says the cultural values underpinning Western culture are tidal and overcome the episodic battle reversals.
I deduct one star because I really think Hanson should have accounted for Nazi Germany. Did this particular German culture arise from the "West" or was it sui generis? To listen to Churchill, the Nazis were a tumor. It's tantalizing to fancy them as a distant consequence of Teutoburg Forest, Augustus's failure to incorporate the Germans into Rome -- by implication, the failure of the Romans to civilize the Germans -- which Hanson mentions in passing. I think he owes us more than that.
In addition to an interesting and well-supported theory of warfare, what makes Carnage and Culture a delight to read is Hanson's narrative gifts. His style is lucid and conversational without being florid or pedantic. And I must confess, I like reading, for a change, somebody who looks at the history of the West in a positive light.
Top reviews from other countries
Mr. Hanson has revitalized the old concept, and in this book he examines several battles across the course of history, from Salamis, to Cortés' conquest of Mexico to the Tet Offensive in Vietnam, all between western and non-western powers. He doesn't entirely cast socio-political investigation overboard, as he makes use of many of the findings of those areas to weave into his tale of the battle (and to some extent the surrounding war).
His major goal is to show why western nations have achieved utter supremacy in today's world. It wasn't fortuitous placement of resources, luck of the draw or anything of the sort -- Mr. Hanson says it's simply that western people have been the most sucessful killers in the entire world. From the discipline of the Greek hoplites, the Romans developed the first "killing machine" of the world --- their legions which devastated armies of other nations. The same holds true for afterwards, as discipline was more highly favored than individual prowess.
I cannot say I fully agree with this book's analysis. Mr. Hanson presents a great deal of data (skillfully and engrossingly written), some of which seems to contradict his premise (indicating an evenhanded approach to the subject). Mostly he manages to deftly weave them into his explanations, creating potent support for said premise how Western supremacy arose -- but there are a couple of instances when he seems to be reaching for straws.
There's also the fact that his very choice of battles omits a couple of incidents that would disprove him. No, these battles are certainly not all western victories, but they are shown as exceptions to a rule -- and yet there are considerably more exceptions. There's also the question of how much foreign cultures must assimilate of western warfaring tradition (Mr. Hanson's statement) to pose a veritable threat to us.
Much though I disagree with some of the deductions of this book, it's an engrossing read and poses several interesting ideas. It also offers fascinating insights into the various eras it describes, the ways battles were fought, the way people thought about battles. It's not a complete history, and I certainly recommend reading additional material to cast a different light on the various times.






