Arming Against Hitler
France and the Limits of Military Planning
Eugenia C. Kiesling
320 pages, 6 x 9
Modern War Studies
Paper ISBN 978-0-7006-1109-6, $19.95
In MayJune 1940 the Germans
demolished the French Army, inflicting more than 300,000 French
casualties, including more than 120,000 dead. While many historians
have focused on France's failure to avoid this catastrophe, Kiesling
is the first to show why the French had good reason to trust
that their prewar defense policies, military doctrine, and combat
forces would preserve the nation.
Kiesling argues that France's devastating defeat was a consequence
neither of blindness to the German military threat nor of paralysis
in the face of it. Grimly aware of the need to prepare for another
war with its arch enemy, French leaders created defense preparations
and military doctrines in which they felt confident.
Rather than simply focusing on what went wrong, Kiesling examines
the fundamental logic of French defense planning within its cultural,
institutional, political, and military contexts. In the process,
she provides much new material about the inner workings of the
French military, its relations with civilian leaders, its lack
of adaptability, and its overreliance on an army reserve that
was poorly organized, trained, and led. Ultimately, she makes
a persuasive case for France's defense options and offers a useful
warning about the utility of the "lessons of history."
The lesson for contemporary policymakers and strategists,
Kiesling suggests, is not that the French made mistakes but that
nations and armies make policy and strategy under severe constraints.
Her study forcefully reminds us how hindsight can blind us to
the complexities of preparing for every next war.
"A compellingly distinctive and original contribution
to our understanding of the period."--John Sweets,
author of Choices in Vichy France: The French Under Nazi Occupation
"A brilliantly written and important book that adds substantially
to our understanding of the French experience in 19281939,
as well as the true nature of national security planning and
military reform."--Robert Doughty, author of The
Seeds of Disaster: The Development of French Army Doctrine, 19191939
and The Breaking Point: Sedan and the Fall of France, 1940
EUGENIA C. KIESLING, assistant professor of military
history at the United States Military Academy, is a former Ford
Fellow at Harvard's Center for International Affairs and taught
at the University of Alabama for five years. She is the editor
and translator of Raoul Castex's Strategic Theories.
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