Military Helicopter Doctrines of the Major Powers, 1945-1992

Making Decisions about Air-Land Warfare

Matthew Allen author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Published:30th May '93

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Military Helicopter Doctrines of the Major Powers, 1945-1992 cover

History and analysis of the military helicopter doctrines of the major powers, focusing on the most recent years and assessing the process by which decisions have been made and innovations have come about in the use of helicopters at war.

This substantial research study is intended for academics, professionals, policy makers, and all interested in the development of helicopters over the last fifty years.

Matthew Allen examines military helicopter doctrines in the United States, former Soviet Union, the United Kingdom, Germany, and France.

This comparative history of the military helicopter doctrines of the major powers since World War II focuses on the last twenty years. This unusual analysis of the decision-making process associated with the use of helicopters in conventional air-land warfare should provoke interest and controversy among students and experts concerned with military strategy. This substantial research study is intended for academics, professionals, policy makers, and all interested in the development of helicopters over the last fifty years. Matthew Allen examines military helicopter doctrines in the United States, former Soviet Union, the United Kingdom, Germany, and France. He describes changes and innovations in the use of helicopters in air-land battle. He also assesses how decisions are made and innovations develop. An appendix summarizes the technical characteristics of helicopters and photographs bring them to life. A bibliography points out the most significant sources for further research; figures clarify the complex decision-making process, and tables provide additional data. A full index makes this rare history accessible.

ISBN: 9780313285226

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 652g

328 pages