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- Path: sparky!uunet!utcsri!torn!news.ccs.queensu.ca!qucdn!spraggej
- Organization: Queen's University at Kingston
- Date: Sun, 15 Nov 1992 13:58:11 EST
- From: John G. Spragge <SPRAGGEJ@QUCDN.QueensU.CA>
- Message-ID: <92320.135811SPRAGGEJ@QUCDN.QueensU.CA>
- Newsgroups: can.politics
- Subject: Re: Senate Interrogation
- Distribution: can
- References: <17215@mindlink.bc.ca> <1992Nov7.145557.8077@julian.uwo.ca>
- <schuck.721165680@sfu.ca> <LABACH.92Nov9083820@acs5.acs.ucalgary.ca>
- <92316.135417SPRAGGEJ@QUCDN.QueensU.CA> <schuck.721543654@sfu.ca>
- <92317.121200SPRAGGEJ@QUCDN.QueensU.CA> <schuck.721608394@sfu.ca>
- <92318.143616SPRAGGEJ@QUCDN.QueensU.CA> <schuck.721767010@sfu.ca>
- Lines: 30
-
- In article <schuck.721767010@sfu.ca>, schuck@fraser.sfu.ca (Bruce Jonathan
- Schuck) says:
- >
- >John G. Spragge <SPRAGGEJ@QUCDN.QueensU.CA> writes:
- >
- >>If your defence can do more damage to the enemy than your offensive,
- >>then you'll obviously do better to defend rather than attack. History
- >>records many commanders who won by letting the enemy come to them.
- >
- >Would you be thinking of France in 1940 and the maginot line?
-
- Try Rommel's trick of luring the British tanks onto a mobile AT gun
- screen in the desert war (see Rommel, the Desert Fox by Morton), the
- French (and American) navies use of the tactical defence (USS Constitution
- vs HMS Macedonian, also Villeneuve vs Calder in the 15/20 battle), the
- defence of Kursk and Stalingrad by Marshall Zhukov (contrasted with
- Timoshenko's failed offensive to recapture Kharkov in 1942). After
- the initial surprise of the blitzkrieg, most advances (from the
- German attack on Stalingrad to Alamein to the Russian offensives
- following the battle of Kursk) followed a successfully repelled enemy
- attack.
-
- Obviously, letting the enemy come to you does not always work. But when
- clear advantages exist for doing so, as in the Battle of Britain, it
- is ridiculous to assume you have some kind of obligation to attack.
-
- Your culture will adapt to service ours - Columbus to Natives, 1492
- Your culture will adapt to service ours - Borg to Captain Picard, 24th C.
-
- standard disclaimers apply ----------------------- John G. Spragge
-