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Carl von Clausewitz

Carl Philipp Gottfried (or Gottlieb) von Clausewitz[note 1] (German pronunciation: [ˌkaʁl fɔn ˈklaʊ̯zəvɪt͡s] ; 1 July 1780 – 16 November 1831)[1] was a Prussian general and military theorist who stressed the "moral" (in modern terms meaning psychological) and political aspects of waging war. His most notable work, Vom Kriege ("On War"), though unfinished at his death, is considered a seminal treatise on military strategy and science.

Carl von Clausewitz
Carl von Clausewitz, while in Prussian service, painted by Wilhelm Wach in early 1830s.
Birth nameCarl Philipp Gottfried von Clausewitz
Born(1780-07-01)1 July 1780
Burg bei Magdeburg, Kingdom of Prussia, Holy Roman Empire
Died16 November 1831(1831-11-16) (aged 51)
Breslau, Province of Silesia, Kingdom of Prussia (present-day Wrocław, Lower Silesian Voivodeship, Poland)
Allegiance
Service/branchPrussian Army
Years of service1792–1831
RankMajor general
UnitRussian–German Legion (III Corps)
Commands heldKriegsakademie
Battles/wars

Clausewitz stressed the multiplex interaction of diverse factors in war, noting how unexpected developments unfolding under the "fog of war" (i.e., in the face of incomplete, dubious, and often erroneous information and great fear, doubt, and excitement) call for rapid decisions by alert commanders. He saw history as a vital check on erudite abstractions that did not accord with experience. In contrast to the early work of Antoine-Henri Jomini, he argued that war could not be quantified or reduced to mapwork, geometry, and graphs. Clausewitz had many aphorisms, of which the most famous is "War is the continuation of policy with other means." (often misquoted as "... by other means").[2]: 87 [3][dubious ]

Name edit

Clausewitz's Christian names are sometimes given in non-German sources as "Karl", "Carl Philipp Gottlieb", or "Carl Maria". He spelled his own given name with a "C" in order to identify with the classical Western tradition; writers who use "Karl" are often seeking to emphasize their German (rather than European) identity. "Carl Philipp Gottfried" appears on Clausewitz's tombstone.[4] Nonetheless, sources such as military historian Peter Paret and Encyclopædia Britannica continue to use Gottlieb instead of Gottfried.[5]

Life and military career edit

Clausewitz was born on 1 July 1780 in Burg bei Magdeburg in the Prussian Duchy of Magdeburg as the fourth and youngest son of a family that made claims to a noble status which Carl accepted. Clausewitz's family claimed descent from the Barons of Clausewitz in Upper Silesia, though scholars question the connection.[6] His grandfather, the son of a Lutheran pastor, had been a professor of theology. Clausewitz's father, once a lieutenant in the army of Frederick the Great, King of Prussia, held a minor post in the Prussian internal-revenue service. Clausewitz entered the Prussian military service at the age of twelve as a lance corporal, eventually attaining the rank of major general.[7]

Clausewitz served in the Rhine campaigns (1793–1794) including the siege of Mainz, when the Prussian Army invaded France during the French Revolution, and fought in the Napoleonic Wars from 1806 to 1815. He entered the Kriegsakademie (also cited as "The German War School", the "Military Academy in Berlin", and the "Prussian Military Academy," later the "War College") in Berlin in 1801 (aged 21), probably studied the writings of the philosophers Immanuel Kant and/or Johann Gottlieb Fichte and Friedrich Schleiermacher and won the regard of General Gerhard von Scharnhorst, the future first chief-of-staff of the newly reformed Prussian Army (appointed 1809). Clausewitz, Hermann von Boyen (1771–1848) and Karl von Grolman (1777–1843) were among Scharnhorst's primary allies in his efforts to reform the Prussian army between 1807 and 1814.[citation needed]

Clausewitz served during the Jena Campaign as aide-de-camp to Prince August. At the Battle of Jena-Auerstedt on 14 October 1806—when Napoleon invaded Prussia and defeated the Prussian-Saxon army commanded by Karl Wilhelm Ferdinand, Duke of Brunswick—he was captured, one of the 25,000 prisoners taken that day as the Prussian army disintegrated. He was 26. Clausewitz was held prisoner with his prince in France from 1807 to 1808. Returning to Prussia, he assisted in the reform of the Prussian army and state.[7] Johann Gottlieb Fichte wrote On Machiavelli, as an Author, and Passages from His Writings in June 1807. ("Über Machiavell, als Schriftsteller, und Stellen aus seinen Schriften" ). Carl Clausewitz wrote an interesting and anonymous Letter to Fichte (1809) about his book on Machiavelli. The letter was published in Fichte's Verstreute kleine Schriften 157–166. For an English translation of the letter see Carl von Clausewitz Historical and Political Writings Edited by: Peter Paret and D. Moran (1992).

 
Marie von Clausewitz (née, Countess von Brühl)

On 10 December 1810, he married the socially prominent Countess Marie von Brühl, whom he had first met in 1803. She was a member of the noble German Brühl family originating in Thuringia. The couple moved in the highest circles, socialising with Berlin's political, literary, and intellectual élite. Marie was well-educated and politically well-connected—she played an important role in her husband's career progress and intellectual evolution.[8] She also edited, published, and introduced his collected works.[9]

Opposed to Prussia's enforced alliance with Napoleon, Clausewitz left the Prussian army and served in the Imperial Russian Army from 1812 to 1813 during the Russian campaign, taking part in the Battle of Borodino (1812). Like many Prussian officers serving in Russia, he joined the Russian–German Legion in 1813. In the service of the Russian Empire, Clausewitz helped negotiate the Convention of Tauroggen (1812), which prepared the way for the coalition of Prussia, Russia, and the United Kingdom that ultimately defeated Napoleon and his allies.[7]

In 1815 the Russian-German Legion became integrated into the Prussian Army and Clausewitz re-entered Prussian service as a colonel.[10] He was soon appointed chief-of-staff of Johann von Thielmann's III Corps. In that capacity he served at the Battle of Ligny and the Battle of Wavre during the Waterloo campaign in 1815. An army led personally by Napoleon defeated the Prussians at Ligny (south of Mont-Saint-Jean and the village of Waterloo) on 16 June 1815, but they withdrew in good order. Napoleon's failure to destroy the Prussian forces led to his defeat a few days later at the Battle of Waterloo (18 June 1815), when the Prussian forces arrived on his right flank late in the afternoon to support the Anglo-Dutch-Belgian forces pressing his front. Napoleon had convinced his troops that the field grey uniforms were those of Marshal Grouchy's grenadiers. Clausewitz's unit fought heavily outnumbered at Wavre (18–19 June 1815), preventing large reinforcements from reaching Napoleon at Waterloo. After the war, Clausewitz served as the director of the Kriegsakademie, where he served until 1830. In that year he returned to active duty with the army. Soon afterward, the outbreak of several revolutions around Europe and a crisis in Poland appeared to presage another major European war. Clausewitz was appointed chief of staff of the only army Prussia was able to mobilise in this emergency, which was sent to the Polish border. Its commander, Gneisenau, died of cholera (August 1831), and Clausewitz took command of the Prussian army's efforts to construct a cordon sanitaire to contain the great cholera outbreak (the first time cholera had appeared in modern heartland Europe, causing a continent-wide panic). Clausewitz himself died of the same disease shortly afterwards, on 16 November 1831.[7]

His widow edited, published, and wrote the introduction to his magnum opus on the philosophy of war in 1832. (He had started working on the text in 1816 but had not completed it.)[11] She wrote the preface for On War and had published most of his collected works by 1835.[9] She died in January 1836.

Theory of war edit

Clausewitz was a professional combat soldier who was involved in numerous military campaigns, but he is famous primarily as a military theorist interested in the examination of war, utilising the campaigns of Frederick the Great and Napoleon as frames of reference for his work.[12] He wrote a careful, systematic, philosophical examination of war in all its aspects. The result was his principal book, On War, a major work on the philosophy of war. It was unfinished when Clausewitz died and contains material written at different stages in his intellectual evolution, producing some significant contradictions between different sections. The sequence and precise character of that evolution is a source of much debate as to the exact meaning behind some seemingly contradictory observations in discussions pertinent to the tactical, operational and strategic levels of war, for example (though many of these apparent contradictions are simply the result of his dialectical method). Clausewitz constantly sought to revise the text, particularly between 1827 and his departure on his last field assignments, to include more material on "people's war" and forms of war other than high-intensity warfare between states, but relatively little of this material was included in the book.[11] Soldiers before this time had written treatises on various military subjects, but none had undertaken a great philosophical examination of war on the scale of those written by Clausewitz and Leo Tolstoy, both of whom were inspired by the events of the Napoleonic Era.

Clausewitz's work is still studied today, demonstrating its continued relevance. More than sixteen major English-language books that focused specifically on his work were published between 2005 and 2014, whereas his 19th-century rival Jomini has faded from influence. The historian Lynn Montross said that this outcome "may be explained by the fact that Jomini produced a system of war, Clausewitz a philosophy. The one has been outdated by new weapons, the other still influences the strategy behind those weapons."[13] Jomini did not attempt to define war but Clausewitz did, providing (and dialectically comparing) a number of definitions. The first is his dialectical thesis: "War is thus an act of force to compel our enemy to do our will." The second, often treated as Clausewitz's 'bottom line,' is in fact merely his dialectical antithesis: "War is merely the continuation of policy with other means." The synthesis of his dialectical examination of the nature of war is his famous "trinity," saying that war is "a fascinating trinity—composed of primordial violence, hatred, and enmity, which are to be regarded as a blind natural force; the play of chance and probability, within which the creative spirit is free to roam; and its element of subordination, as an instrument of policy, which makes it subject to pure reason."[14][improper synthesis?] Christopher Bassford says the best shorthand for Clausewitz's trinity should be something like "violent emotion/chance/rational calculation." However, it is frequently presented as "people/army/government," a misunderstanding based on a later paragraph in the same section. This misrepresentation was popularised by U.S. Army Colonel Harry Summers' Vietnam-era interpretation,[15] facilitated by weaknesses in the 1976 Howard/Paret translation.[16]

The degree to which Clausewitz managed to revise his manuscript to reflect that synthesis is the subject of much debate. His final reference to war and Politik, however, goes beyond his widely quoted antithesis: "War is simply the continuation of political intercourse with the addition of other means. We deliberately use the phrase 'with the addition of other means' because we also want to make it clear that war in itself does not suspend political intercourse or change it into something entirely different. In essentials that intercourse continues, irrespective of the means it employs. The main lines along which military events progress, and to which they are restricted, are political lines that continue throughout the war into the subsequent peace."[17]

A prince or general who knows exactly how to organise his war according to his object and means, who does neither too little nor too much, gives by that the greatest proof of his genius. But the effects of this talent are exhibited not so much by the invention of new modes of action, which might strike the eye immediately, as in the successful final result of the whole. It is the exact fulfilment of silent suppositions, it is the noiseless harmony of the whole action which we should admire, and which only makes itself known in the total result.

— Clausewitz, On War, Book III, Chapter 1[18]: Vol. I pgs. 85–86 

Clausewitz introduced systematic philosophical contemplation into Western military thinking, with powerful implications not only for historical and analytical writing but also for practical policy, military instruction, and operational planning. He relied on his own experiences, contemporary writings about Napoleon, and on deep historical research. His historiographical approach is evident in his first extended study, written when he was 25, of the Thirty Years' War. He rejects the Enlightenment's view of the war as a chaotic muddle and instead explains its drawn-out operations by the economy and technology of the age, the social characteristics of the troops, and the commanders' politics and psychology. In On War, Clausewitz sees all wars as the sum of decisions, actions, and reactions in an uncertain and dangerous context, and also as a socio-political phenomenon. He also stressed the complex nature of war, which encompasses both the socio-political and the operational and stresses the primacy of state policy. (One should be careful not to limit his observations on war to war between states, however, as he certainly discusses other kinds of protagonists).[19]: viii 

The word "strategy" had only recently come into usage in modern Europe, and Clausewitz's definition is quite narrow: "the use of engagements for the object of war" (which many today would call "the operational level" of war). Clausewitz conceived of war as a political, social, and military phenomenon which might—depending on circumstances—involve the entire population of a political entity at war. In any case, Clausewitz saw military force as an instrument that states and other political actors use to pursue the ends of their policy, in a dialectic between opposing wills, each with the aim of imposing his policies and will upon his enemy.[20]

Clausewitz's emphasis on the inherent superiority of the defense suggests that habitual aggressors are likely to end up as failures. The inherent superiority of the defense obviously does not mean that the defender will always win, however: there are other asymmetries to be considered. He was interested in co-operation between the regular army and militia or partisan forces, or citizen soldiers, as one possible—sometimes the only—method of defense. In the circumstances of the Wars of the French Revolution and those with Napoleon, which were energised by a rising spirit of nationalism, he emphasised the need for states to involve their entire populations in the conduct of war. This point is especially important, as these wars demonstrated that such energies could be of decisive importance and for a time led to a democratisation of the armed forces much as universal suffrage democratised politics.[21]

While Clausewitz was intensely aware of the value of intelligence at all levels, he was also very skeptical of the accuracy of much military intelligence: "Many intelligence reports in war are contradictory; even more are false, and most are uncertain.... In short, most intelligence is false."[18]: Vol. I pg. 38  This circumstance is generally described as part of the fog of war. Such skeptical comments apply only to intelligence at the tactical and operational levels; at the strategic and political levels he constantly stressed the requirement for the best possible understanding of what today would be called strategic and political intelligence. His conclusions were influenced by his experiences in the Prussian Army, which was often in an intelligence fog due partly to the superior abilities of Napoleon's system but even more simply to the nature of war. Clausewitz acknowledges that friction creates enormous difficulties for the realization of any plan, and the fog of war hinders commanders from knowing what is happening. It is precisely in the context of this challenge that he develops the concept of military genius, whose capabilities are seen above all in the execution of operations. 'Military genius' is not simply a matter of intellect, but a combination of qualities of intellect, experience, personality, and temperament (and there are many possible such combinations) that create a very highly developed mental aptitude for the waging of war.[22]

Principal ideas edit

 
Clausewitz as a young man

Key ideas discussed in On War include:[23]

  • the dialectical approach to military analysis
  • the methods of "critical analysis"
  • the economic profit-seeking logic of commercial enterprise is equally applicable to the waging of war and negotiating for peace
  • the nature of the balance-of-power mechanism
  • the relationship between political objectives and military objectives in war
  • the asymmetrical relationship between attack and defense
  • the nature of "military genius" (involving matters of personality and character, beyond intellect)
  • the "fascinating trinity" (wunderliche Dreifaltigkeit) of war[24]
  • philosophical distinctions between "absolute war," "ideal war," and "real war"
  • in "real war," the distinctive poles of a) limited objectives (political and/or military) and b) war to "render the enemy helpless"
  • the idea that war and its conduct belong fundamentally to the social realm rather than to the realms of art or science
  • "strategy" belongs primarily to the realm of art, but is constrained by quantitative analyses of political benefits versus military costs & losses
  • "tactics" belongs primarily to the realm of science (most obvious in the development of siege warfare)
  • the importance of "moral forces" (more than simply "morale") as opposed to quantifiable physical elements
  • the "military virtues" of professional armies (which do not necessarily trump the rather different virtues of other kinds of fighting forces)
  • conversely, the very real effects of a superiority in numbers and "mass"
  • the essential unpredictability of war
  • the "fog of war"[note 2]
  • "friction" – the disparity between the ideal performance of units, organisations or systems and their actual performance in real-world scenarios (Book I, Chapter VII)
  • strategic and operational "centers of gravity"[note 3]
  • the "culminating point of the offensive"
  • the "culminating point of victory"

Interpretation and misinterpretation edit

Clausewitz used a dialectical method to construct his argument, leading to frequent misinterpretation of his ideas. British military theorist B. H. Liddell Hart contends that the enthusiastic acceptance by the Prussian military establishment—especially Moltke the Elder, a former student of Clausewitz [25]—of what they believed to be Clausewitz's ideas, and the subsequent widespread adoption of the Prussian military system worldwide, had a deleterious effect on military theory and practice, due to their egregious misinterpretation of his ideas:

As so often happens, Clausewitz's disciples carried his teaching to an extreme which their master had not intended.... [Clausewitz's] theory of war was expounded in a way too abstract and involved for ordinary soldier-minds, essentially concrete, to follow the course of his argument—which often turned back from the direction in which it was apparently leading. Impressed yet befogged, they grasped at his vivid leading phrases, seeing only their surface meaning, and missing the deeper current of his thought.[26]

As described by Christopher Bassford, then-professor of strategy at the National War College of the United States:

One of the main sources of confusion about Clausewitz's approach lies in his dialectical method of presentation. For example, Clausewitz's famous line that "War is the continuation of policy with other means," ("Der Krieg ist eine bloße Fortsetzung der Politik mit anderen Mitteln") while accurate as far as it goes, was not intended as a statement of fact. It is the antithesis in a dialectical argument whose thesis is the point—made earlier in the analysis—that "war is nothing but a duel [or wrestling match, the extended metaphor in which that discussion was embedded] on a larger scale." His synthesis, which resolves the deficiencies of these two bold statements, says that war is neither "nothing but" an act of brute force nor "merely" a rational act of politics or policy. This synthesis lies in his "fascinating trinity" [wunderliche Dreifaltigkeit]: a dynamic, inherently unstable interaction of the forces of violent emotion, chance, and rational calculation.[7]

Another example of this confusion is the idea that Clausewitz was a proponent of total war as used in the Third Reich's propaganda in the 1940s. In fact, Clausewitz never used the term "total war": rather, he discussed "absolute war," a concept which evolved into the much more abstract notion of "ideal war" discussed at the very beginning of Vom Kriege—the purely logical result of the forces underlying a "pure," Platonic "ideal" of war.[27] In what he called a "logical fantasy," war cannot be waged in a limited way: the rules of competition will force participants to use all means at their disposal to achieve victory. But in the real world, he said, such rigid logic is unrealistic and dangerous. As a practical matter, the military objectives in real war that support political objectives generally fall into two broad types: limited aims or the effective "disarming" of the enemy "to render [him] politically helpless or militarily impotent. Thus, the complete defeat of the enemy may not be necessary, desirable, or even possible.[28]

In modern times the reconstruction of Clausewitzian theory has been a matter of much dispute. One analysis was that of Panagiotis Kondylis, a Greek writer and philosopher, who opposed the interpretations of Raymond Aron in Penser la Guerre, Clausewitz, and other liberal writers. According to Aron, Clausewitz was one of the first writers to condemn the militarism of the Prussian general staff and its war-proneness, based on Clausewitz's argument that "war is a continuation of policy by other means." In Theory of War, Kondylis claims that this is inconsistent with Clausewitzian thought. He claims that Clausewitz was morally indifferent to war (though this probably reflects a lack of familiarity with personal letters from Clausewitz, which demonstrate an acute awareness of war's tragic aspects) and that his advice regarding politics' dominance over the conduct of war has nothing to do with pacifist ideas.

Other notable writers who have studied Clausewitz's texts and translated them into English are historians Peter Paret of the Institute for Advanced Study and Sir Michael Howard. Howard and Paret edited the most widely used edition of On War (Princeton University Press, 1976/1984) and have produced comparative studies of Clausewitz and other theorists, such as Tolstoy. Bernard Brodie's A Guide to the Reading of "On War," in the 1976 Princeton translation, expressed his interpretations of the Prussian's theories and provided students with an influential synopsis of this vital work. The 1873 translation by Colonel James John Graham was heavily—and controversially—edited by the philosopher, musician, and game theorist Anatol Rapoport.

The British military historian John Keegan attacked Clausewitz's theory in his book A History of Warfare.[29] Keegan argued that Clausewitz assumed the existence of states, yet 'war antedates the state, diplomacy and strategy by many millennia.'

Influence edit

Clausewitz died without completing Vom Kriege, but despite this his ideas have been widely influential in military theory and have had a strong influence on German military thought specifically. Later Prussian and German generals, such as Helmuth Graf von Moltke, were clearly influenced by Clausewitz: Moltke's widely quoted statement that "No operational plan extends with high certainty beyond the first encounter with the main enemy force" is a classic reflection of Clausewitz's insistence on the roles of chance, friction, "fog," uncertainty, and interactivity in war.[30]: 20–21 

Clausewitz's influence spread to British thinking as well, though at first more as a historian and analyst than as a theorist.[30] See for example Wellington's extended essay discussing Clausewitz's study of the Campaign of 1815—Wellington's only serious written discussion of the battle, which was widely discussed in 19th-century Britain. Clausewitz's broader thinking came to the fore following Britain's military embarrassments in the Boer War (1899–1902). One example of a heavy Clausewitzian influence in that era is Spenser Wilkinson, journalist, the first Chichele Professor of Military History at Oxford University, and perhaps the most prominent military analyst in Britain from c. 1885 until well into the interwar period. Another is naval historian Julian Corbett (1854–1922), whose work reflected a deep if idiosyncratic adherence to Clausewitz's concepts and frequently an emphasis on Clausewitz's ideas about 'limited objectives' and the inherent strengths of the defensive form of war. Corbett's practical strategic views were often in prominent public conflict with Wilkinson's—see, for example, Wilkinson's article "Strategy at Sea", The Morning Post, 12 February 1912. Following the First World War, however, the influential British military commentator B. H. Liddell Hart in the 1920s erroneously attributed to him the doctrine of "total war" that during the First World War had been embraced by many European general staffs and emulated by the British. More recent scholars typically see that war as so confused in terms of political rationale that it in fact contradicts much of On War.[31] That view assumes, however, a set of values as to what constitutes "rational" political objectives—in this case, values not shaped by the fervid Social Darwinism that was rife in 1914 Europe. One of the most influential British Clausewitzians today is Colin S. Gray; historian Hew Strachan (like Wilkinson also the Chichele Professor of Military History at Oxford University, since 2001) has been an energetic proponent of the study of Clausewitz, but his own views on Clausewitz's ideas are somewhat ambivalent.

With some interesting exceptions (e.g., John McAuley Palmer, Robert M. Johnston, Hoffman Nickerson), Clausewitz had little influence on American military thought before 1945 other than via British writers, though Generals Eisenhower and Patton were avid readers of English translations. He did influence Karl Marx, Friedrich Engels, Vladimir Lenin, Leon Trotsky,[32] : 233–260  Võ Nguyên Giáp,[33] Ferdinand Foch,[34] and Mao Zedong, and thus the Communist Soviet and Chinese traditions, as Lenin emphasized the inevitability of wars among capitalist states in the age of imperialism and presented the armed struggle of the working class as the only path toward the eventual elimination of war.[35] Because Lenin was an admirer of Clausewitz and called him "one of the great military writers," his influence on the Red Army was immense.[36] The Russian historian A.N. Mertsalov commented that "It was an irony of fate that the view in the USSR was that it was Lenin who shaped the attitude towards Clausewitz, and that Lenin's dictum that war is a continuation of politics is taken from the work of this [allegedly] anti-humanist anti-revolutionary."[36] The American mathematician Anatol Rapoport wrote in 1968 that Clausewitz as interpreted by Lenin formed the basis of all Soviet military thinking since 1917, and quoted the remarks by Marshal V.D. Sokolovsky:

In describing the essence of war, Marxism-Leninism takes as its point of departure the premise that war is not an aim in itself, but rather a tool of politics. In his remarks on Clausewitz's On War, Lenin stressed that "Politics is the reason, and war is only the tool, not the other way around. Consequently, it remains only to subordinate the military point of view to the political."[37]: 37 

Henry A. Kissinger, however, described Lenin's approach as being that politics is a continuation of war by other means, thus turning Clausewitz's argument "on its head."[30]: 198 

Rapoport argued that:

As for Lenin's approval of Clausewitz, it probably stems from his obsession with the struggle for power. The whole Marxist conception of history is that of successive struggles for power, primarily between social classes. This was constantly applied by Lenin in a variety of contexts. Thus the entire history of philosophy appears in Lenin's writings as a vast struggle between "idealism" and "materialism." The fate of the socialist movement was to be decided by a struggle between the revolutionists and the reformers. Clausewitz's acceptance of the struggle for power as the essence of international politics must have impressed Lenin as starkly realistic.[37]: 37–38 

Clausewitz directly influenced Mao Zedong, who read On War in 1938 and organised a seminar on Clausewitz for the Party leadership in Yan'an. Thus the "Clausewitzian" content in many of Mao's writings is not merely a regurgitation of Lenin but reflects Mao's own study.[38] The idea that war involves inherent "friction" that distorts, to a greater or lesser degree, all prior arrangements, has become common currency in fields such as business strategy and sport. The phrase fog of war derives from Clausewitz's stress on how confused warfare can seem while one is immersed within it.[39] The term center of gravity, used in a military context derives from Clausewitz's usage, which he took from Newtonian mechanics. In U.S. military doctrine, "center of gravity" refers to the basis of an opponent's power at the operational, strategic, or political level, though this is only one aspect of Clausewitz's use of the term.[40]

Late 20th and early 21st century edit

The deterrence strategy of the United States in the 1950s was closely inspired by President Dwight Eisenhower's reading of Clausewitz as a young officer in the 1920s. Eisenhower was greatly impressed by Clausewitz's example of a theoretical, idealized "absolute war" in Vom Kriege as a way of demonstrating how absurd it would be to attempt such a strategy in practice. For Eisenhower, the age of nuclear weapons had made what was for Clausewitz in the early-19th century only a theoretical vision an all too real possibility in the mid-20th century. From Eisenhower's viewpoint, the best deterrent to war was to show the world just how appalling and horrific a nuclear "absolute war" would be if it should ever occur, hence a series of much-publicized nuclear tests in the Pacific, giving first priority in the defense budget to nuclear weapons and to their delivery-systems over conventional weapons, and making repeated statements in public that the United States was able and willing at all times to use nuclear weapons. In this way, through the massive retaliation doctrine and the closely related foreign-policy concept of brinkmanship, Eisenhower hoped to hold out a credible vision of Clausewitzian nuclear "absolute war" in order to deter the Soviet Union and/or China from ever risking a war or even conditions that might lead to a war with the United States.[41]

...Philanthropists may easily imagine there is a skillful method of disarming and overcoming an enemy without causing great bloodshed, and that this is the proper tendency of the art of War. However plausible this may appear, still it is an error which must be extirpated; for in such dangerous things as war, the errors which proceed from a spirit of benevolence are just the worst. As the use of physical power to the utmost extent by no means excludes the co-operation of the intelligence, it follows that he who uses force unsparingly, without reference to the quantity of bloodshed, must obtain a superiority if his adversary does not act likewise. By such means the former dictates the law to the latter, and both proceed to extremities, to which the only limitations are those imposed by the amount of counteracting force on each side.

— Clausewitz, On War, Book I, Chapter 1[18]: Vol. I, pp. 1–2 

After 1970, some theorists claimed that nuclear proliferation made Clausewitzian concepts obsolete after the 20th-century period in which they dominated the world.[42] John E. Sheppard, Jr., argues that by developing nuclear weapons, state-based conventional armies simultaneously both perfected their original purpose, to destroy a mirror image of themselves, and made themselves obsolete. No two powers have used nuclear weapons against each other, instead using diplomacy, conventional means, or proxy wars to settle disputes. If such a conflict did occur, presumably both combatants would be annihilated. Heavily influenced by the war in Vietnam and by antipathy to American strategist Henry Kissinger, the American biologist, musician, and game-theorist Anatol Rapoport argued in 1968 that a Clausewitzian view of war was not only obsolete in the age of nuclear weapons, but also highly dangerous as it promoted a "zero-sum paradigm" to international relations and a "dissolution of rationality" amongst decision-makers.[37]: 73–77 

The end of the 20th century and the beginning of the 21st century have seen many instances of state armies attempting to suppress insurgencies and terrorism, and engaging in other forms of asymmetrical warfare. Clausewitz did not focus solely on wars between countries with well-defined armies. The era of the French Revolution and Napoleon was full of revolutions, rebellions, and violence by "non-state actors" - witness the wars in the French Vendée and in Spain. Clausewitz wrote a series of "Lectures on Small War" and studied the rebellion in the Vendée (1793–1796) and the Tyrolean uprising of 1809. In his famous "Bekenntnisdenkschrift" of 1812 he called for a "Spanish war in Germany" and laid out a comprehensive guerrilla strategy to be waged against Napoleon. In On War he included a famous chapter on "The People in Arms".[43]

One prominent critic of Clausewitz is the Israeli military historian Martin van Creveld. In his 1991 book The Transformation of War,[44] Creveld argued that Clausewitz's famous "Trinity" of people, army, and government was an obsolete socio-political construct based on the state, which was rapidly passing from the scene as the key player in war, and that he (Creveld) had constructed a new "non-trinitarian" model for modern warfare. Creveld's work has had great influence. Daniel Moran replied, 'The most egregious misrepresentation of Clausewitz's famous metaphor must be that of Martin van Creveld, who has declared Clausewitz to be an apostle of Trinitarian War, by which he means, incomprehensibly, a war of 'state against state and army against army,' from which the influence of the people is entirely excluded."[45] Christopher Bassford went further, noting that one need only read the paragraph in which Clausewitz defined his Trinity to see

"that the words 'people,' 'army,' and 'government' appear nowhere at all in the list of the Trinity's components.... Creveld's and Keegan's assault on Clausewitz's Trinity is not only a classic 'blow into the air,' i.e., an assault on a position Clausewitz doesn't occupy. It is also a pointless attack on a concept that is quite useful in its own right. In any case, their failure to read the actual wording of the theory they so vociferously attack, and to grasp its deep relevance to the phenomena they describe, is hard to credit."[24]

Some have gone further and suggested that Clausewitz's best-known aphorism, that war is a continuation of policy with other means, is not only irrelevant today but also inapplicable historically.[46] For an opposing view see the sixteen essays presented in Clausewitz in the Twenty-First Century edited by Hew Strachan and Andreas Herberg-Rothe.[47]

In military academies, schools, and universities worldwide, Clausewitz's Vom Kriege is often (usually in translation) mandatory reading.[48]

Some theorists of management look to Clausewitz - just as some look to Sun Tzu - to bolster ideas on the concept of leadership.[49][50]

See also edit

August Otto Rühle von Lilienstern – Prussian officer from whom Clausewitz allegedly took, without acknowledgement, several important ideas (including that about war as pursuing political aims) made famous in On War. However, substantial basis for assuming common influences exist, most prominently Scharnhorst, who was Clausewitz's "second father" and professional mentor. This provokes skepticism of the claim the ideas were plagiarized from Lilienstern.

References edit

Informational notes

  1. ^ In German personal names, von is a preposition which approximately means of or from and usually denotes some sort of nobility. While von (always lower case) is part of the family name or territorial designation, not a first or middle name, if the noble is referred to by his last name, use Schiller, Clausewitz or Goethe, not von Schiller, etc.
  2. ^ "[T]he great uncertainty of all data in war is a peculiar difficulty, because all action must, to a certain extent, be planned in a mere twilight, which in addition not unfrequently—like the effect of a fog or moonshine—gives to things exaggerated dimensions and an unnatural appearance."[18]: Vol. I p. 54 
  3. ^ "As the centre of gravity is always situated where the greatest mass of matter is collected, and as a shock against the center of gravity of a body always produces the greatest effect, and further, as the most effective blow is struck with the center of gravity of the power used, so it is also in war. The armed forces of every belligerent, whether of a single state or of an alliance of states, have a certain unity, and in that way, connection; but where connection is there come in analogies of the center of gravity. There are, therefore, in these armed forces certain centers of gravity, the movement and direction of which decide upon other points, and these centers of gravity are situated where the greatest bodies of troops are assembled. But just as, in the world of inert matter, the action against the center of gravity has its measure and limits in the connection of the parts, so it is in war, and here as well as there the force exerted may easily be greater than the resistance requires, and then there is a blow in the air, a waste of force."[18]: Vol. II pg. 180 

Citations

  1. ^ Bassford, Christopher (March 8, 2016). "Clausewitz and His Works". Clausewitz.com. Retrieved July 9, 2018.
  2. ^ Clausewitz, Carl von (1984) [1832]. Howard, Michael; Paret, Peter (eds.). On War [Vom Krieg] (Indexed ed.). New Jersey: Princeton University Press. p. 87. ISBN 978-0-691-01854-6.
  3. ^ Holmes, James R. "Everything You Know About Clausewitz Is Wrong". thediplomat.com.
  4. ^ "Clausewitz's tombstone". Clausewitz.com. Retrieved July 9, 2018.
  5. ^ "Carl von Clausewitz". Encyclopædia Britannica. 22 February 2024.
  6. ^ Aron, Raymond (1983). Clausewitz: Philosopher of War. Taylor & Francis. pp. 12–14. ISBN 978-0710090096.
  7. ^ a b c d e Bassford, Christopher (March 8, 2016). "Clausewitz and His Works". Clausewitz.com. Retrieved July 9, 2018.
  8. ^ Bellinger, Vanya Eftimova. Marie von Clausewitz: The Woman Behind the Making of On War. New York/London: Oxford University Press, 2015. ISBN 978-0-19-022543-8
  9. ^ a b Bellinger, Vanya Eftimova (January 6, 2016). "Five Things You Didn't Know About Carl von Clausewitz". Real Clear Defense. Retrieved 7 January 2016.
  10. ^ See Timothy McCranor, "On the Pedagogical Intent of Clausewitz's On War", MCU Journal vol. 9, no. 1, Spring 2018, pp.133-154.
  11. ^ a b Smith, Rupert, The Utility of Force, Penguin Books, 2006, p. 57; Paul Donker, "The Evolution of Clausewitz's Vom Kriege: a reconstruction on the basis of the earlier versions of his masterpiece," trans. Paul Donker and Christopher Bassford, ClausewitzStudies.org, August 2019.
  12. ^ Paret, Peter (2012). "Clausewitz and Schlieffen as Interpreters of Frederick the Great: Three Phases in the History of Grand Strategy". Journal of Military History. 76 (3): 837–845.
  13. ^ Lynn Montross, War Through the Ages (2nd ed. 1946) p. 583.
  14. ^ Carl von Clausewitz, On War, originally Vom Kriege (3 vols., Berlin: 1832–34). The edition cited here was edited by Michael Howard and Peter Paret, Princeton University Press, 1984, pp. 75, 87, 89, 605.
  15. ^ Summers, Harry G., Jr. On Strategy: A Critical Analysis of the Vietnam War (Novato, CA: Presidio Press, 1982).
  16. ^ Bassford, Christopher (2007). "The Primacy of Policy and the "Trinity" in Clausewitz's Mature Thought.". In Strachan, Hew; Herberg-Rothe, Andreas (eds.). Clausewitz in the Twenty-First Century: Proceedings of a March, 2005 conference at Oxford. Oxford University Press. pp. 74–90.
  17. ^ Evan Luard, ed. (2016). Basic Texts in International Relations: The Evolution of Ideas about International Society. Springer. p. 244. ISBN 978-1349221073.
  18. ^ a b c d e von Clausewitz, Carl (1873) [1832]. On War [Vom Krieg]. Translated by Graham, J.J. London: N. Trübner & Co.
  19. ^ Paret, Clausewitz and the State: The Man, His Theories, and His Times
  20. ^ Heuser, Beatrice (2007). "Clausewitz' Ideas of Strategy and Victory". In Strachan, Hew; Herberg-Rothe, Andreas (eds.). Clausewitz in the 21st Century: Proceedings of a March, 2005 conference at Oxford. Oxford University Press. pp. 132–163.
  21. ^ Handel, Michael I. (1986). Clausewitz and Modern Strategy. Psychology Press. p. 71. ISBN 978-0714632940.
  22. ^ Shepherd III, Frederick L. (2014). The Fog Of War: Effects Of Uncertainty On Airpower Employment. Pickle Partners. p. 9. ISBN 978-1782896807.
  23. ^ This list is from "Frequently Asked Questions about Clausewitz," ClausewitzStudies.org, edited by Christopher Bassford.
  24. ^ a b Tip-Toe Through the Trinity: The Strange Persistence of Trinitarian Warfare by Christopher Bassford
  25. ^ Moltke, Helmuth (1892). Moltke: His Life and His Character: Sketched in Journals, Letters, Memoirs, a Novel, and Autobiographical Notes. Translated by Herms, Mary. New York: Harper & Brothers Franklin Square. p. 35.
  26. ^ Liddell Hart, B. H. Strategy London:Faber, 1967. Second rev. ed.
  27. ^ Bassford, Christopher (15 February 2022). (PDF). Clausewitz. Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 December 2022. Retrieved 26 October 2022.
  28. ^ Brands, Hal; Suri, Jeremi (2015). The Power of the Past: History and Statecraft. Brookings Institution Press. p. 147. ISBN 978-0815727132.
  29. ^ John Keegan, A History of Warfare, 1993. Second edition 2004, p. 3.
  30. ^ a b c Bassford, Christopher (1994). Clausewitz in English: The Reception of Clausewitz in Britain and America, 1815–1945. Oxford UP. pp. 20–21. ISBN 978-0195083835.
  31. ^ Strachan, Hew (2011). "Clausewitz and the First World War". Journal of Military History. 75 (2): 367–391.
  32. ^ Cormier, Youri. War As Paradox: Clausewitz & Hegel on Fighting Doctrines and Ethics, (Montreal & Kingston: McGill Queen's University Press, 2016) http://www.mqup.ca/war-as-paradox-products-9780773547698.php
  33. ^ T. Derbent: Giap et Clausewitz, éditions ADEN, Bruxelles 2006.
  34. ^ Shirer, p. 80
  35. ^ Kipp, Joseph W. "Lenin and Clausewitz: the Militarization of Marxism, 1914–1921." Military Affairs 1985 49(4): 184–191. ISSN 0026-3931. In JSTOR
  36. ^ a b Mertsalov, A.N. "Jomini versus Clausewitz" pp. 11–19 from Russia War, Peace and Diplomacy edited by Mark and Ljubica Erickson, London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2004 p. 16.
  37. ^ a b c Rapoport, Anatol "Introduction" pp. 11–82 from On War, London: Penguin, 1968.
  38. ^ Zhang, Yuanlin (1999). "Mao Zedongs Bezugnahme auf Clausewitz". Archiv für Kulturgeschichte. 81 (2): 443–471. doi:10.7788/akg.1999.81.2.443. S2CID 183164307.
  39. ^ Berkun, Scott (2005). The Art of Project Management. Beijing: OŔeilly. ISBN 978-0-596-00786-7.
  40. ^ Joseph W Graham (2002). What the U. S. Military Can Do to Defeat Terrorism. iUniverse. p. 7. ISBN 978-0595222599.
  41. ^ Gaddis, John Lewis We Now Know, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997, 1998 pp. 233–234.
  42. ^ Sheppard, John E. Jr. (September 1990). "On War: Is Clausewitz Still Relevant?". Parameters. 20 (3): 85–99.
  43. ^ Reiner Pommerin (2014). Clausewitz Goes Global: Carl von Clausewitz in the 21st century. BoD – Books on Demand. p. 293. ISBN 978-3937885780.
  44. ^ Martin van Creveld, The Transformation of War: The Most Radical Reinterpretation of Armed Conflict Since Clausewitz (New York: The Free Press, 1991).
  45. ^ Daniel Moran, "Clausewitz on Waterloo: Napoleon at Bay", in Carl von Clausewitz and Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington, On Waterloo: Clausewitz, Wellington, and the Campaign of 1815, ed./trans. Christopher Bassford, Daniel Moran, and Gregory W. Pedlow (Clausewitz.com, 2010), p.242, n.11.
  46. ^ See for instance John Keegan, A History of Warfare (New York: Knopf, 1993), passim.
  47. ^ Strachan, Hew; Herberg-Rothe, Andreas, eds. (2007). Clausewitz in the Twenty-First Century: Proceedings of a March, 2005 conference at Oxford. Oxford University Press.
  48. ^ Giuseppe Caforio, Social sciences and the military: an interdisciplinary overview (2006) p. 221
  49. ^ For example: Paley, Norton (8 May 2014). Clausewitz Talks Business: An Executive's Guide to Thinking Like a Strategist. Boca Raton: CRC Press. p. 224. ISBN 9781482220278. Retrieved 29 February 2024. Strategy Guideline 7: Develop Leadership Skills
  50. ^ Compare: Coker, Christopher (15 May 2017). Rebooting Clausewitz: 'On War' in the Twenty-First Century. New York: Oxford University Press. p. xx. ISBN 9780190862749. Retrieved 29 February 2024. Had [Clausewitz] lived in the twenty-first century he could have expected to [...] have seen his book go into several editions. Perhaps his work would be raided by editors in search of an endless series of quotes. Perhaps while browsing airport bookshops we would find books with titles such as Clausewitz's Six Leadership Lessons [...].

Further reading edit

  • See massive Clausewitz bibliographies in English, French, German, etc., on The Clausewitz Homepage bibliography section.
  • Aron, Raymond. Clausewitz: Philosopher of War. (1985). 418 pp. ISBN 0671628267 OCLC 13702496
  • Bassford, Christopher. Clausewitz in English: The Reception of Clausewitz in Britain and America, 1815–1945. New York: Oxford University Press, 1994. ISBN 0195083830 OCLC 27811623
  • Christopher Bassford, "Tiptoe Through the Trinity: The Strange Persistence of Trinitarian Warfare." Working paper.
  • Christopher Bassford, "Clausewitz's Categories of War and the Supersession of 'Absolute War' 2018-04-17 at the Wayback Machine" (Clausewitz.com). This is a 'working paper' first posted in 2016."
  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Clausewitz, Karl von" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 06 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 467.
  • Cormier, Youri. "Fighting Doctrines and Revolutionary Ethics" Journal of Military and Security Studies, Vol 15, No 1 (2013)
  • Cormier, Youri (2014). "Hegel and Clausewitz: Convergence on Method, Divergence on Ethics". The International History Review. 36 (3): 419–442. doi:10.1080/07075332.2013.859166. S2CID 143665195.
  • Cormier, Youri. War As Paradox: Clausewitz & Hegel on Fighting Doctrines and Ethics, (Montreal & Kingston: McGill Queen's University Press, 2016) pp. 183–232
  • Dimitriu, George (2018). "Clausewitz and the politics of war: A contemporary theory". Journal of Strategic Studies. 43 (5): 1–41. doi:10.1080/01402390.2018.1529567.
  • Donker, Paul. "The Evolution of Clausewitz's Vom Kriege: a reconstruction on the basis of the earlier versions of his masterpiece." Trans. Paul Donker and Christopher Bassford, ClausewitzStudies.org, August 2019. Originally "Die Entwicklung von Clausewitz' Vom Kriege: Eine Rekonstruktion auf der Grundlage der früheren Fassungen seines Meisterwerks," in the Clausewitz-Gesellschaft's Jahrbuch2017, pp. 14–39.
  • Echevarria, Antulio J., II. After Clausewitz: German Military Thinkers before the Great War. (2001). 346 pp. ISBN 0700610715 OCLC 44516530
  • Echevarria II, Antulio J. (2007). Clausewitz and Contemporary War. doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199231911.001.0001. ISBN 978-0199231911.
  • Gat, Azar. The Origins of Military Thought from the Enlightenment to Clausewitz (1989) ISBN 0198229488 OCLC 18779344
  • Handel, Michael I., ed. Clausewitz and Modern Strategy. 1986. 324 pp. ISBN 0714632945 OCLC 13214672
  • Handel, Michael I. Masters of War: Classical Strategic Thought. (2001) 482 pages. Based on comparison of Clausewitz's On War with Sun Tzu's The Art of War ISBN 0714681326 OCLC 318033033
  • Heuser, Beatrice. Reading Clausewitz. (2002). 238 pages, ISBN 0-7126-6484-X
  • Heuser, Beatrice (2010). "Small Wars in the Age of Clausewitz: The Watershed Between Partisan War and People's War". Journal of Strategic Studies. 33: 139–162. doi:10.1080/01402391003603623. S2CID 154880399.
  • Holmes, Terence M. (2007). "Planning versus Chaos in Clausewitz's On War". Journal of Strategic Studies. 30: 129–151. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.472.9658. doi:10.1080/01402390701210855. S2CID 44042550.
  • Sir Michael Howard, Clausewitz, 1983 [originally a volume in the Oxford University Press "Past Masters" series, reissued in 2000 as Clausewitz: A Very Short Introduction]. ISBN 0-192-87608-2 OCLC 8709266
  • Bassford, Christopher (1994). "John Keegan and the Grand Tradition of Trashing Clausewitz: A Polemic". War in History. 1 (3): 319–336. doi:10.1177/096834459400100305. S2CID 162660742.
    • See critique of Keegan's arguments by Christopher Bassford, "John Keegan and the Grand Tradition of Trashing Clausewitz: A Polemic," War in History, November 1994, pp. 319–336.
  • Kinross, Stuart (2009). Clausewitz and America. doi:10.4324/9780203089125. ISBN 978-0203089125.
  • Mieszkowski, Jan (2009). "How to do Things with Clausewitz". The Global South. 3: 18–29. doi:10.2979/GSO.2009.3.1.18. S2CID 143627760.
  • Mertsalov, A.N. "Jomini versus Clausewitz" pp. 11–19 from Russia War, Peace and Diplomacy edited by Mark and Ljubica Erickson, London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2004, ISBN 0-297-84913-1.
  • Paret, Peter. Clausewitz in His Time: Essays in the Cultural and Intellectual History of Thinking about War. New York and Oxford: Berghahn Books, 2015.
  • Peter Paret (2010). "Two Historians on Defeat in War and Its Causes". Historically Speaking. 11 (3): 2–8. doi:10.1353/hsp.0.0118. S2CID 162357305.
  • Paret, Peter. Clausewitz and the State: The Man, His Theories, and His Times. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1976.
  • Paret, Peter (2004). "From Ideal to Ambiguity: Johannes von Muller, Clausewitz, and the People in Arms". Journal of the History of Ideas. 65: 101–111. doi:10.1353/jhi.2004.0021. S2CID 143173095.
  • Rogers, Clifford J. (2002). "Clausewitz, Genius, and the Rules". The Journal of Military History. 66 (4): 1167–1176. doi:10.2307/3093268. JSTOR 3093268.
  • Paul Roques, Le général de Clausewitz. Sa vie et sa théorie de la guerre, Paris, Editions Astrée, 2013. ISBN 979-10-91815-01-7 http://www.editions-astree.fr/BC/Bon_de_commande_Roques.pdf
  • Rothfels, Hans "Clausewitz" pp. 93–113 from The Makers of Modern Strategy edited by Edward Mead Earle, Gordon A. Craig & Felix Gilbert, Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1943.
  • Sharma, Vivek Swaroop (2015). "A social theory of war: Clausewitz and war reconsidered". Cambridge Review of International Affairs. 28 (3): 327–347. doi:10.1080/09557571.2013.872600. S2CID 144039698.
  • Smith, Hugh. On Clausewitz: A Study of Military and Political Ideas. (2005). 303 pp.
  • Stoker, Donald J. Clausewitz: His Life and Work (Oxford UP, 2014) 376 pp. online review; also excerpt
  • Strachan, Hew; Herberg-Rothe, Andreas, eds. (2007). Clausewitz in the Twenty-First Century. doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199232024.001.0001. ISBN 978-0199232024.
  • Strachan, Hew, and Andreas Herberg-Rothe, eds. Clausewitz in the Twenty-First Century (2007) excerpt and text search
  • Sumida, Jon Tetsuro (2001). "The Relationship of History and Theory in on War: The Clausewitzian Ideal and Its Implications". The Journal of Military History. 65 (2): 333–354. doi:10.2307/2677163. JSTOR 2677163.
  • Sumida, Jon Tetsuro. Decoding Clausewitz: A New Approach to On War Lawrence, Kansas: University Press of Kansas, 2008. ISBN 978-0700616169 OCLC 213765799
  • Villacres, Edward J. and Bassford, Christopher. "Reclaiming the Clausewitzian Trinity". Parameters, Autumn 95, pp. 9–19,
  • Wallach, Jehuda L. The Dogma of the Battle of Annihilation: The Theories of Clausewitz and Schlieffen and Their Impact on the German Conduct of Two World Wars. (1986).
  • Waldman, Thomas (2012). "Clausewitz and the Study of War". Defence Studies. 13 (3): 345–374. doi:10.1080/14702436.2012.703843. ISSN 1470-2436. S2CID 153486360.

Primary sources (including translations) edit

  • Clausewitz, Carl von. Historical and Political Writings, ed. Peter Paret and Daniel Moran (1992).
  • Clausewitz, Carl von. Vom Kriege. Berlin: Dümmlers Verlag, 1832.
  • Clausewitz, Carl von (1984) [1976]. Howard, Michael; Paret, Peter (eds.). On War (trans. ed.). Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-05657-9.
  • Clausewitz, Carl von. On War, abridged version translated by Michael Howard and Peter Paret, edited with an introduction by Beatrice Heuser Oxford World's Classics (Oxford University Press, 2007) ISBN 978-0-19-954002-0
  • Clausewitz, Carl von. Principles of War. Translated by Hans Gatske. The Military Service Publishing Company, 1942. Originally "Die wichtigsten Grundsätze des Kriegführens zur Ergänzung meines Unterrichts bei Sr. Königlichen Hoheit dem Kronprinzen" (written 1812).
  • Clausewitz, Carl von. Col. J. J. Graham, translator. Vom Kriege. On War – Volume 1, Project Gutenberg eBook. The full text of the 1873 English translation can be seen in parallel with the original German text at Compare VOM KRIEGE (1832) and ON WAR (1873 translation) 2018-11-11 at the Wayback Machine. Compare VOM KRIEGE (1832) and ON WAR (1873 translation) 2018-11-11 at the Wayback Machine
  • Clausewitz, Karl von. On War. Trans. O.J. Matthijs Jolles. New York: Random House, 1943. Though not currently the standard translation, this is increasingly viewed by many Clausewitz scholars as the most precise and accurate English translation.
  • Clausewitz, Carl von (2018). Napoleon's 1796 Italian Campaign. Trans and ed. Nicholas Murray and Christopher Pringle. Lawrence, Kansas: University Press of Kansas. ISBN 978-0-7006-2676-2
  • Clausewitz, Carl von (2020). Napoleon Absent, Coalition Ascendant: The 1799 Campaign in Italy and Switzerland, Volume 1. Trans and ed. Nicholas Murray and Christopher Pringle. Lawrence, Kansas: University Press of Kansas. ISBN 978-0-7006-3025-7 online review
  • Clausewitz, Carl von (2021). The Coalition Crumbles, Napoleon Returns: The 1799 Campaign in Italy and Switzerland, Volume 2. Trans and ed. Nicholas Murray and Christopher Pringle. Lawrence, Kansas: University Press of Kansas. ISBN 978-0-7006-3034-9
  • Clausewitz, Carl von. The Campaign of 1812 in Russia 2020-01-13 at the Wayback Machine. Trans. anonymous [Wellington's friend Francis Egerton, later Lord Ellesmere], London: John Murray Publishers, 1843. Originally Carl von Clausewitz, Hinterlassene Werke des Generals Carl von Clausewitz über Krieg und Krieg führung, 10 vols., Berlin, 1832–37, "Der Feldzug von 1812 in Russland" in Vol. 7, Berlin, 1835.
  • Clausewitz, Carl von, and Wellesley, Arthur (First Duke of Wellington), ed./trans. Christopher Bassford, Gregory W. Pedlow, and Daniel Moran, On Waterloo: Clausewitz, Wellington, and the Campaign of 1815. (Clausewitz.com, 2010). This collection of documents includes, in a modern English translation, the whole of Clausewitz's study, The Campaign of 1815: Strategic Overview (Berlin: 1835). ISBN 1-4537-0150-8. It also includes Wellington's reply to Clausewitz's discussion of the campaign, as well as two letters by Clausewitz to his wife after the major battles of 1815 and other supporting documents and essays.
  • Clausewitz, Carl von. Two Letters on Strategy. Ed./trans. Peter Paret and Daniel Moran. Carlisle: Army War College Foundation, 1984.

External links edit

  • Mind Map of On War
  • Clausewitz homepage, large amounts of information.
  • Corn, Tony. "Clausewitz in Wonderland", Policy Review, September 2006. This is an article hostile to "Clausewitz and the Clausewitzians." See also reply by Clausewitz Homepage, "Clausewitz's self-appointed PR Flack."
  • Works by Carl von Clausewitz at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Carl von Clausewitz at Internet Archive
  • Works by Carl von Clausewitz at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Two Letters On Strategy, addressed to the Prussian general-staff officer, Major von Roeder, respectively of 22 and 24 December 1827.
  • Erfourth M. & Bazin, A. (2014). Clausewitz's Military Genius and the #Human Dimension. The Bridge.

carl, clausewitz, clausewitz, redirects, here, part, defence, berlin, during, world, operation, clausewitz, paradox, computer, strategy, games, engine, clausewitz, engine, carl, philipp, gottfried, gottlieb, clausewitz, note, german, pronunciation, ˌkaʁl, fɔn,. Clausewitz redirects here For the part of defence of Berlin during World War II see Operation Clausewitz For the Paradox computer strategy games engine see Clausewitz Engine Carl Philipp Gottfried or Gottlieb von Clausewitz note 1 German pronunciation ˌkaʁl fɔn ˈklaʊ zevɪt s 1 July 1780 16 November 1831 1 was a Prussian general and military theorist who stressed the moral in modern terms meaning psychological and political aspects of waging war His most notable work Vom Kriege On War though unfinished at his death is considered a seminal treatise on military strategy and science Carl von ClausewitzCarl von Clausewitz while in Prussian service painted by Wilhelm Wach in early 1830s Birth nameCarl Philipp Gottfried von ClausewitzBorn 1780 07 01 1 July 1780Burg bei Magdeburg Kingdom of Prussia Holy Roman EmpireDied16 November 1831 1831 11 16 aged 51 Breslau Province of Silesia Kingdom of Prussia present day Wroclaw Lower Silesian Voivodeship Poland AllegiancePrussiaRussian Empire 1812 1813 Service wbr branchPrussian ArmyYears of service1792 1831RankMajor generalUnitRussian German Legion III Corps Commands heldKriegsakademieBattles warsFrench Revolutionary Wars Siege of Mainz Napoleonic Wars Battle of Jena Auerstedt Battle of Borodino Battle of Ligny Battle of Wavre Clausewitz stressed the multiplex interaction of diverse factors in war noting how unexpected developments unfolding under the fog of war i e in the face of incomplete dubious and often erroneous information and great fear doubt and excitement call for rapid decisions by alert commanders He saw history as a vital check on erudite abstractions that did not accord with experience In contrast to the early work of Antoine Henri Jomini he argued that war could not be quantified or reduced to mapwork geometry and graphs Clausewitz had many aphorisms of which the most famous is War is the continuation of policy with other means often misquoted as by other means 2 87 3 dubious discuss Contents 1 Name 2 Life and military career 3 Theory of war 3 1 Principal ideas 4 Interpretation and misinterpretation 5 Influence 5 1 Late 20th and early 21st century 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 8 1 Primary sources including translations 9 External linksName editClausewitz s Christian names are sometimes given in non German sources as Karl Carl Philipp Gottlieb or Carl Maria He spelled his own given name with a C in order to identify with the classical Western tradition writers who use Karl are often seeking to emphasize their German rather than European identity Carl Philipp Gottfried appears on Clausewitz s tombstone 4 Nonetheless sources such as military historian Peter Paret and Encyclopaedia Britannica continue to use Gottlieb instead of Gottfried 5 Life and military career editClausewitz was born on 1 July 1780 in Burg bei Magdeburg in the Prussian Duchy of Magdeburg as the fourth and youngest son of a family that made claims to a noble status which Carl accepted Clausewitz s family claimed descent from the Barons of Clausewitz in Upper Silesia though scholars question the connection 6 His grandfather the son of a Lutheran pastor had been a professor of theology Clausewitz s father once a lieutenant in the army of Frederick the Great King of Prussia held a minor post in the Prussian internal revenue service Clausewitz entered the Prussian military service at the age of twelve as a lance corporal eventually attaining the rank of major general 7 Clausewitz served in the Rhine campaigns 1793 1794 including the siege of Mainz when the Prussian Army invaded France during the French Revolution and fought in the Napoleonic Wars from 1806 to 1815 He entered the Kriegsakademie also cited as The German War School the Military Academy in Berlin and the Prussian Military Academy later the War College in Berlin in 1801 aged 21 probably studied the writings of the philosophers Immanuel Kant and or Johann Gottlieb Fichte and Friedrich Schleiermacher and won the regard of General Gerhard von Scharnhorst the future first chief of staff of the newly reformed Prussian Army appointed 1809 Clausewitz Hermann von Boyen 1771 1848 and Karl von Grolman 1777 1843 were among Scharnhorst s primary allies in his efforts to reform the Prussian army between 1807 and 1814 citation needed Clausewitz served during the Jena Campaign as aide de camp to Prince August At the Battle of Jena Auerstedt on 14 October 1806 when Napoleon invaded Prussia and defeated the Prussian Saxon army commanded by Karl Wilhelm Ferdinand Duke of Brunswick he was captured one of the 25 000 prisoners taken that day as the Prussian army disintegrated He was 26 Clausewitz was held prisoner with his prince in France from 1807 to 1808 Returning to Prussia he assisted in the reform of the Prussian army and state 7 Johann Gottlieb Fichte wrote On Machiavelli as an Author and Passages from His Writings in June 1807 Uber Machiavell als Schriftsteller und Stellen aus seinen Schriften Carl Clausewitz wrote an interesting and anonymous Letter to Fichte 1809 about his book on Machiavelli The letter was published in Fichte s Verstreute kleine Schriften 157 166 For an English translation of the letter see Carl von Clausewitz Historical and Political Writings Edited by Peter Paret and D Moran 1992 nbsp Marie von Clausewitz nee Countess von Bruhl On 10 December 1810 he married the socially prominent Countess Marie von Bruhl whom he had first met in 1803 She was a member of the noble German Bruhl family originating in Thuringia The couple moved in the highest circles socialising with Berlin s political literary and intellectual elite Marie was well educated and politically well connected she played an important role in her husband s career progress and intellectual evolution 8 She also edited published and introduced his collected works 9 Opposed to Prussia s enforced alliance with Napoleon Clausewitz left the Prussian army and served in the Imperial Russian Army from 1812 to 1813 during the Russian campaign taking part in the Battle of Borodino 1812 Like many Prussian officers serving in Russia he joined the Russian German Legion in 1813 In the service of the Russian Empire Clausewitz helped negotiate the Convention of Tauroggen 1812 which prepared the way for the coalition of Prussia Russia and the United Kingdom that ultimately defeated Napoleon and his allies 7 In 1815 the Russian German Legion became integrated into the Prussian Army and Clausewitz re entered Prussian service as a colonel 10 He was soon appointed chief of staff of Johann von Thielmann s III Corps In that capacity he served at the Battle of Ligny and the Battle of Wavre during the Waterloo campaign in 1815 An army led personally by Napoleon defeated the Prussians at Ligny south of Mont Saint Jean and the village of Waterloo on 16 June 1815 but they withdrew in good order Napoleon s failure to destroy the Prussian forces led to his defeat a few days later at the Battle of Waterloo 18 June 1815 when the Prussian forces arrived on his right flank late in the afternoon to support the Anglo Dutch Belgian forces pressing his front Napoleon had convinced his troops that the field grey uniforms were those of Marshal Grouchy s grenadiers Clausewitz s unit fought heavily outnumbered at Wavre 18 19 June 1815 preventing large reinforcements from reaching Napoleon at Waterloo After the war Clausewitz served as the director of the Kriegsakademie where he served until 1830 In that year he returned to active duty with the army Soon afterward the outbreak of several revolutions around Europe and a crisis in Poland appeared to presage another major European war Clausewitz was appointed chief of staff of the only army Prussia was able to mobilise in this emergency which was sent to the Polish border Its commander Gneisenau died of cholera August 1831 and Clausewitz took command of the Prussian army s efforts to construct a cordon sanitaire to contain the great cholera outbreak the first time cholera had appeared in modern heartland Europe causing a continent wide panic Clausewitz himself died of the same disease shortly afterwards on 16 November 1831 7 His widow edited published and wrote the introduction to his magnum opus on the philosophy of war in 1832 He had started working on the text in 1816 but had not completed it 11 She wrote the preface for On War and had published most of his collected works by 1835 9 She died in January 1836 Theory of war editClausewitz was a professional combat soldier who was involved in numerous military campaigns but he is famous primarily as a military theorist interested in the examination of war utilising the campaigns of Frederick the Great and Napoleon as frames of reference for his work 12 He wrote a careful systematic philosophical examination of war in all its aspects The result was his principal book On War a major work on the philosophy of war It was unfinished when Clausewitz died and contains material written at different stages in his intellectual evolution producing some significant contradictions between different sections The sequence and precise character of that evolution is a source of much debate as to the exact meaning behind some seemingly contradictory observations in discussions pertinent to the tactical operational and strategic levels of war for example though many of these apparent contradictions are simply the result of his dialectical method Clausewitz constantly sought to revise the text particularly between 1827 and his departure on his last field assignments to include more material on people s war and forms of war other than high intensity warfare between states but relatively little of this material was included in the book 11 Soldiers before this time had written treatises on various military subjects but none had undertaken a great philosophical examination of war on the scale of those written by Clausewitz and Leo Tolstoy both of whom were inspired by the events of the Napoleonic Era Clausewitz s work is still studied today demonstrating its continued relevance More than sixteen major English language books that focused specifically on his work were published between 2005 and 2014 whereas his 19th century rival Jomini has faded from influence The historian Lynn Montross said that this outcome may be explained by the fact that Jomini produced a system of war Clausewitz a philosophy The one has been outdated by new weapons the other still influences the strategy behind those weapons 13 Jomini did not attempt to define war but Clausewitz did providing and dialectically comparing a number of definitions The first is his dialectical thesis War is thus an act of force to compel our enemy to do our will The second often treated as Clausewitz s bottom line is in fact merely his dialectical antithesis War is merely the continuation of policy with other means The synthesis of his dialectical examination of the nature of war is his famous trinity saying that war is a fascinating trinity composed of primordial violence hatred and enmity which are to be regarded as a blind natural force the play of chance and probability within which the creative spirit is free to roam and its element of subordination as an instrument of policy which makes it subject to pure reason 14 improper synthesis Christopher Bassford says the best shorthand for Clausewitz s trinity should be something like violent emotion chance rational calculation However it is frequently presented as people army government a misunderstanding based on a later paragraph in the same section This misrepresentation was popularised by U S Army Colonel Harry Summers Vietnam era interpretation 15 facilitated by weaknesses in the 1976 Howard Paret translation 16 The degree to which Clausewitz managed to revise his manuscript to reflect that synthesis is the subject of much debate His final reference to war and Politik however goes beyond his widely quoted antithesis War is simply the continuation of political intercourse with the addition of other means We deliberately use the phrase with the addition of other means because we also want to make it clear that war in itself does not suspend political intercourse or change it into something entirely different In essentials that intercourse continues irrespective of the means it employs The main lines along which military events progress and to which they are restricted are political lines that continue throughout the war into the subsequent peace 17 A prince or general who knows exactly how to organise his war according to his object and means who does neither too little nor too much gives by that the greatest proof of his genius But the effects of this talent are exhibited not so much by the invention of new modes of action which might strike the eye immediately as in the successful final result of the whole It is the exact fulfilment of silent suppositions it is the noiseless harmony of the whole action which we should admire and which only makes itself known in the total result Clausewitz On War Book III Chapter 1 18 Vol I pgs 85 86 Clausewitz introduced systematic philosophical contemplation into Western military thinking with powerful implications not only for historical and analytical writing but also for practical policy military instruction and operational planning He relied on his own experiences contemporary writings about Napoleon and on deep historical research His historiographical approach is evident in his first extended study written when he was 25 of the Thirty Years War He rejects the Enlightenment s view of the war as a chaotic muddle and instead explains its drawn out operations by the economy and technology of the age the social characteristics of the troops and the commanders politics and psychology In On War Clausewitz sees all wars as the sum of decisions actions and reactions in an uncertain and dangerous context and also as a socio political phenomenon He also stressed the complex nature of war which encompasses both the socio political and the operational and stresses the primacy of state policy One should be careful not to limit his observations on war to war between states however as he certainly discusses other kinds of protagonists 19 viii The word strategy had only recently come into usage in modern Europe and Clausewitz s definition is quite narrow the use of engagements for the object of war which many today would call the operational level of war Clausewitz conceived of war as a political social and military phenomenon which might depending on circumstances involve the entire population of a political entity at war In any case Clausewitz saw military force as an instrument that states and other political actors use to pursue the ends of their policy in a dialectic between opposing wills each with the aim of imposing his policies and will upon his enemy 20 Clausewitz s emphasis on the inherent superiority of the defense suggests that habitual aggressors are likely to end up as failures The inherent superiority of the defense obviously does not mean that the defender will always win however there are other asymmetries to be considered He was interested in co operation between the regular army and militia or partisan forces or citizen soldiers as one possible sometimes the only method of defense In the circumstances of the Wars of the French Revolution and those with Napoleon which were energised by a rising spirit of nationalism he emphasised the need for states to involve their entire populations in the conduct of war This point is especially important as these wars demonstrated that such energies could be of decisive importance and for a time led to a democratisation of the armed forces much as universal suffrage democratised politics 21 While Clausewitz was intensely aware of the value of intelligence at all levels he was also very skeptical of the accuracy of much military intelligence Many intelligence reports in war are contradictory even more are false and most are uncertain In short most intelligence is false 18 Vol I pg 38 This circumstance is generally described as part of the fog of war Such skeptical comments apply only to intelligence at the tactical and operational levels at the strategic and political levels he constantly stressed the requirement for the best possible understanding of what today would be called strategic and political intelligence His conclusions were influenced by his experiences in the Prussian Army which was often in an intelligence fog due partly to the superior abilities of Napoleon s system but even more simply to the nature of war Clausewitz acknowledges that friction creates enormous difficulties for the realization of any plan and the fog of war hinders commanders from knowing what is happening It is precisely in the context of this challenge that he develops the concept of military genius whose capabilities are seen above all in the execution of operations Military genius is not simply a matter of intellect but a combination of qualities of intellect experience personality and temperament and there are many possible such combinations that create a very highly developed mental aptitude for the waging of war 22 Principal ideas edit nbsp Clausewitz as a young man Key ideas discussed in On War include 23 the dialectical approach to military analysis the methods of critical analysis the economic profit seeking logic of commercial enterprise is equally applicable to the waging of war and negotiating for peace the nature of the balance of power mechanism the relationship between political objectives and military objectives in war the asymmetrical relationship between attack and defense the nature of military genius involving matters of personality and character beyond intellect the fascinating trinity wunderliche Dreifaltigkeit of war 24 philosophical distinctions between absolute war ideal war and real war in real war the distinctive poles of a limited objectives political and or military and b war to render the enemy helpless the idea that war and its conduct belong fundamentally to the social realm rather than to the realms of art or science strategy belongs primarily to the realm of art but is constrained by quantitative analyses of political benefits versus military costs amp losses tactics belongs primarily to the realm of science most obvious in the development of siege warfare the importance of moral forces more than simply morale as opposed to quantifiable physical elements the military virtues of professional armies which do not necessarily trump the rather different virtues of other kinds of fighting forces conversely the very real effects of a superiority in numbers and mass the essential unpredictability of war the fog of war note 2 friction the disparity between the ideal performance of units organisations or systems and their actual performance in real world scenarios Book I Chapter VII strategic and operational centers of gravity note 3 the culminating point of the offensive the culminating point of victory Interpretation and misinterpretation editClausewitz used a dialectical method to construct his argument leading to frequent misinterpretation of his ideas British military theorist B H Liddell Hart contends that the enthusiastic acceptance by the Prussian military establishment especially Moltke the Elder a former student of Clausewitz 25 of what they believed to be Clausewitz s ideas and the subsequent widespread adoption of the Prussian military system worldwide had a deleterious effect on military theory and practice due to their egregious misinterpretation of his ideas As so often happens Clausewitz s disciples carried his teaching to an extreme which their master had not intended Clausewitz s theory of war was expounded in a way too abstract and involved for ordinary soldier minds essentially concrete to follow the course of his argument which often turned back from the direction in which it was apparently leading Impressed yet befogged they grasped at his vivid leading phrases seeing only their surface meaning and missing the deeper current of his thought 26 As described by Christopher Bassford then professor of strategy at the National War College of the United States One of the main sources of confusion about Clausewitz s approach lies in his dialectical method of presentation For example Clausewitz s famous line that War is the continuation of policy with other means Der Krieg ist eine blosse Fortsetzung der Politik mit anderen Mitteln while accurate as far as it goes was not intended as a statement of fact It is the antithesis in a dialectical argument whose thesis is the point made earlier in the analysis that war is nothing but a duel or wrestling match the extended metaphor in which that discussion was embedded on a larger scale His synthesis which resolves the deficiencies of these two bold statements says that war is neither nothing but an act of brute force nor merely a rational act of politics or policy This synthesis lies in his fascinating trinity wunderliche Dreifaltigkeit a dynamic inherently unstable interaction of the forces of violent emotion chance and rational calculation 7 Another example of this confusion is the idea that Clausewitz was a proponent of total war as used in the Third Reich s propaganda in the 1940s In fact Clausewitz never used the term total war rather he discussed absolute war a concept which evolved into the much more abstract notion of ideal war discussed at the very beginning of Vom Kriege the purely logical result of the forces underlying a pure Platonic ideal of war 27 In what he called a logical fantasy war cannot be waged in a limited way the rules of competition will force participants to use all means at their disposal to achieve victory But in the real world he said such rigid logic is unrealistic and dangerous As a practical matter the military objectives in real war that support political objectives generally fall into two broad types limited aims or the effective disarming of the enemy to render him politically helpless or militarily impotent Thus the complete defeat of the enemy may not be necessary desirable or even possible 28 In modern times the reconstruction of Clausewitzian theory has been a matter of much dispute One analysis was that of Panagiotis Kondylis a Greek writer and philosopher who opposed the interpretations of Raymond Aron in Penser la Guerre Clausewitz and other liberal writers According to Aron Clausewitz was one of the first writers to condemn the militarism of the Prussian general staff and its war proneness based on Clausewitz s argument that war is a continuation of policy by other means In Theory of War Kondylis claims that this is inconsistent with Clausewitzian thought He claims that Clausewitz was morally indifferent to war though this probably reflects a lack of familiarity with personal letters from Clausewitz which demonstrate an acute awareness of war s tragic aspects and that his advice regarding politics dominance over the conduct of war has nothing to do with pacifist ideas Other notable writers who have studied Clausewitz s texts and translated them into English are historians Peter Paret of the Institute for Advanced Study and Sir Michael Howard Howard and Paret edited the most widely used edition of On War Princeton University Press 1976 1984 and have produced comparative studies of Clausewitz and other theorists such as Tolstoy Bernard Brodie s A Guide to the Reading of On War in the 1976 Princeton translation expressed his interpretations of the Prussian s theories and provided students with an influential synopsis of this vital work The 1873 translation by Colonel James John Graham was heavily and controversially edited by the philosopher musician and game theorist Anatol Rapoport The British military historian John Keegan attacked Clausewitz s theory in his book A History of Warfare 29 Keegan argued that Clausewitz assumed the existence of states yet war antedates the state diplomacy and strategy by many millennia Influence editClausewitz died without completing Vom Kriege but despite this his ideas have been widely influential in military theory and have had a strong influence on German military thought specifically Later Prussian and German generals such as Helmuth Graf von Moltke were clearly influenced by Clausewitz Moltke s widely quoted statement that No operational plan extends with high certainty beyond the first encounter with the main enemy force is a classic reflection of Clausewitz s insistence on the roles of chance friction fog uncertainty and interactivity in war 30 20 21 Clausewitz s influence spread to British thinking as well though at first more as a historian and analyst than as a theorist 30 See for example Wellington s extended essay discussing Clausewitz s study of the Campaign of 1815 Wellington s only serious written discussion of the battle which was widely discussed in 19th century Britain Clausewitz s broader thinking came to the fore following Britain s military embarrassments in the Boer War 1899 1902 One example of a heavy Clausewitzian influence in that era is Spenser Wilkinson journalist the first Chichele Professor of Military History at Oxford University and perhaps the most prominent military analyst in Britain from c 1885 until well into the interwar period Another is naval historian Julian Corbett 1854 1922 whose work reflected a deep if idiosyncratic adherence to Clausewitz s concepts and frequently an emphasis on Clausewitz s ideas about limited objectives and the inherent strengths of the defensive form of war Corbett s practical strategic views were often in prominent public conflict with Wilkinson s see for example Wilkinson s article Strategy at Sea The Morning Post 12 February 1912 Following the First World War however the influential British military commentator B H Liddell Hart in the 1920s erroneously attributed to him the doctrine of total war that during the First World War had been embraced by many European general staffs and emulated by the British More recent scholars typically see that war as so confused in terms of political rationale that it in fact contradicts much of On War 31 That view assumes however a set of values as to what constitutes rational political objectives in this case values not shaped by the fervid Social Darwinism that was rife in 1914 Europe One of the most influential British Clausewitzians today is Colin S Gray historian Hew Strachan like Wilkinson also the Chichele Professor of Military History at Oxford University since 2001 has been an energetic proponent of the study of Clausewitz but his own views on Clausewitz s ideas are somewhat ambivalent With some interesting exceptions e g John McAuley Palmer Robert M Johnston Hoffman Nickerson Clausewitz had little influence on American military thought before 1945 other than via British writers though Generals Eisenhower and Patton were avid readers of English translations He did influence Karl Marx Friedrich Engels Vladimir Lenin Leon Trotsky 32 233 260 Vo Nguyen Giap 33 Ferdinand Foch 34 and Mao Zedong and thus the Communist Soviet and Chinese traditions as Lenin emphasized the inevitability of wars among capitalist states in the age of imperialism and presented the armed struggle of the working class as the only path toward the eventual elimination of war 35 Because Lenin was an admirer of Clausewitz and called him one of the great military writers his influence on the Red Army was immense 36 The Russian historian A N Mertsalov commented that It was an irony of fate that the view in the USSR was that it was Lenin who shaped the attitude towards Clausewitz and that Lenin s dictum that war is a continuation of politics is taken from the work of this allegedly anti humanist anti revolutionary 36 The American mathematician Anatol Rapoport wrote in 1968 that Clausewitz as interpreted by Lenin formed the basis of all Soviet military thinking since 1917 and quoted the remarks by Marshal V D Sokolovsky In describing the essence of war Marxism Leninism takes as its point of departure the premise that war is not an aim in itself but rather a tool of politics In his remarks on Clausewitz s On War Lenin stressed that Politics is the reason and war is only the tool not the other way around Consequently it remains only to subordinate the military point of view to the political 37 37 Henry A Kissinger however described Lenin s approach as being that politics is a continuation of war by other means thus turning Clausewitz s argument on its head 30 198 Rapoport argued that As for Lenin s approval of Clausewitz it probably stems from his obsession with the struggle for power The whole Marxist conception of history is that of successive struggles for power primarily between social classes This was constantly applied by Lenin in a variety of contexts Thus the entire history of philosophy appears in Lenin s writings as a vast struggle between idealism and materialism The fate of the socialist movement was to be decided by a struggle between the revolutionists and the reformers Clausewitz s acceptance of the struggle for power as the essence of international politics must have impressed Lenin as starkly realistic 37 37 38 Clausewitz directly influenced Mao Zedong who read On War in 1938 and organised a seminar on Clausewitz for the Party leadership in Yan an Thus the Clausewitzian content in many of Mao s writings is not merely a regurgitation of Lenin but reflects Mao s own study 38 The idea that war involves inherent friction that distorts to a greater or lesser degree all prior arrangements has become common currency in fields such as business strategy and sport The phrase fog of war derives from Clausewitz s stress on how confused warfare can seem while one is immersed within it 39 The term center of gravity used in a military context derives from Clausewitz s usage which he took from Newtonian mechanics In U S military doctrine center of gravity refers to the basis of an opponent s power at the operational strategic or political level though this is only one aspect of Clausewitz s use of the term 40 Late 20th and early 21st century edit The deterrence strategy of the United States in the 1950s was closely inspired by President Dwight Eisenhower s reading of Clausewitz as a young officer in the 1920s Eisenhower was greatly impressed by Clausewitz s example of a theoretical idealized absolute war in Vom Kriege as a way of demonstrating how absurd it would be to attempt such a strategy in practice For Eisenhower the age of nuclear weapons had made what was for Clausewitz in the early 19th century only a theoretical vision an all too real possibility in the mid 20th century From Eisenhower s viewpoint the best deterrent to war was to show the world just how appalling and horrific a nuclear absolute war would be if it should ever occur hence a series of much publicized nuclear tests in the Pacific giving first priority in the defense budget to nuclear weapons and to their delivery systems over conventional weapons and making repeated statements in public that the United States was able and willing at all times to use nuclear weapons In this way through the massive retaliation doctrine and the closely related foreign policy concept of brinkmanship Eisenhower hoped to hold out a credible vision of Clausewitzian nuclear absolute war in order to deter the Soviet Union and or China from ever risking a war or even conditions that might lead to a war with the United States 41 Philanthropists may easily imagine there is a skillful method of disarming and overcoming an enemy without causing great bloodshed and that this is the proper tendency of the art of War However plausible this may appear still it is an error which must be extirpated for in such dangerous things as war the errors which proceed from a spirit of benevolence are just the worst As the use of physical power to the utmost extent by no means excludes the co operation of the intelligence it follows that he who uses force unsparingly without reference to the quantity of bloodshed must obtain a superiority if his adversary does not act likewise By such means the former dictates the law to the latter and both proceed to extremities to which the only limitations are those imposed by the amount of counteracting force on each side Clausewitz On War Book I Chapter 1 18 Vol I pp 1 2 After 1970 some theorists claimed that nuclear proliferation made Clausewitzian concepts obsolete after the 20th century period in which they dominated the world 42 John E Sheppard Jr argues that by developing nuclear weapons state based conventional armies simultaneously both perfected their original purpose to destroy a mirror image of themselves and made themselves obsolete No two powers have used nuclear weapons against each other instead using diplomacy conventional means or proxy wars to settle disputes If such a conflict did occur presumably both combatants would be annihilated Heavily influenced by the war in Vietnam and by antipathy to American strategist Henry Kissinger the American biologist musician and game theorist Anatol Rapoport argued in 1968 that a Clausewitzian view of war was not only obsolete in the age of nuclear weapons but also highly dangerous as it promoted a zero sum paradigm to international relations and a dissolution of rationality amongst decision makers 37 73 77 The end of the 20th century and the beginning of the 21st century have seen many instances of state armies attempting to suppress insurgencies and terrorism and engaging in other forms of asymmetrical warfare Clausewitz did not focus solely on wars between countries with well defined armies The era of the French Revolution and Napoleon was full of revolutions rebellions and violence by non state actors witness the wars in the French Vendee and in Spain Clausewitz wrote a series of Lectures on Small War and studied the rebellion in the Vendee 1793 1796 and the Tyrolean uprising of 1809 In his famous Bekenntnisdenkschrift of 1812 he called for a Spanish war in Germany and laid out a comprehensive guerrilla strategy to be waged against Napoleon In On War he included a famous chapter on The People in Arms 43 One prominent critic of Clausewitz is the Israeli military historian Martin van Creveld In his 1991 book The Transformation of War 44 Creveld argued that Clausewitz s famous Trinity of people army and government was an obsolete socio political construct based on the state which was rapidly passing from the scene as the key player in war and that he Creveld had constructed a new non trinitarian model for modern warfare Creveld s work has had great influence Daniel Moran replied The most egregious misrepresentation of Clausewitz s famous metaphor must be that of Martin van Creveld who has declared Clausewitz to be an apostle of Trinitarian War by which he means incomprehensibly a war of state against state and army against army from which the influence of the people is entirely excluded 45 Christopher Bassford went further noting that one need only read the paragraph in which Clausewitz defined his Trinity to see that the words people army and government appear nowhere at all in the list of the Trinity s components Creveld s and Keegan s assault on Clausewitz s Trinity is not only a classic blow into the air i e an assault on a position Clausewitz doesn t occupy It is also a pointless attack on a concept that is quite useful in its own right In any case their failure to read the actual wording of the theory they so vociferously attack and to grasp its deep relevance to the phenomena they describe is hard to credit 24 Some have gone further and suggested that Clausewitz s best known aphorism that war is a continuation of policy with other means is not only irrelevant today but also inapplicable historically 46 For an opposing view see the sixteen essays presented in Clausewitz in the Twenty First Century edited by Hew Strachan and Andreas Herberg Rothe 47 In military academies schools and universities worldwide Clausewitz s Vom Kriege is often usually in translation mandatory reading 48 Some theorists of management look to Clausewitz just as some look to Sun Tzu to bolster ideas on the concept of leadership 49 50 See also editAugust Otto Ruhle von Lilienstern Prussian officer from whom Clausewitz allegedly took without acknowledgement several important ideas including that about war as pursuing political aims made famous in On War However substantial basis for assuming common influences exist most prominently Scharnhorst who was Clausewitz s second father and professional mentor This provokes skepticism of the claim the ideas were plagiarized from Lilienstern Famous military writers Niccolo Machiavelli The Prince Antoine Henri Jomini B H Liddell Hart Sun Tzu Maurice de Saxe Absolute war Operation Clausewitz Philosophy of war Principles of War Strategic studies Total war U S Army StrategistReferences editInformational notes In German personal names von is a preposition which approximately means of or from and usually denotes some sort of nobility While von always lower case is part of the family name or territorial designation not a first or middle name if the noble is referred to by his last name use Schiller Clausewitz or Goethe not von Schiller etc T he great uncertainty of all data in war is a peculiar difficulty because all action must to a certain extent be planned in a mere twilight which in addition not unfrequently like the effect of a fog or moonshine gives to things exaggerated dimensions and an unnatural appearance 18 Vol I p 54 As the centre of gravity is always situated where the greatest mass of matter is collected and as a shock against the center of gravity of a body always produces the greatest effect and further as the most effective blow is struck with the center of gravity of the power used so it is also in war The armed forces of every belligerent whether of a single state or of an alliance of states have a certain unity and in that way connection but where connection is there come in analogies of the center of gravity There are therefore in these armed forces certain centers of gravity the movement and direction of which decide upon other points and these centers of gravity are situated where the greatest bodies of troops are assembled But just as in the world of inert matter the action against the center of gravity has its measure and limits in the connection of the parts so it is in war and here as well as there the force exerted may easily be greater than the resistance requires and then there is a blow in the air a waste of force 18 Vol II pg 180 Citations Bassford Christopher March 8 2016 Clausewitz and His Works Clausewitz com Retrieved July 9 2018 Clausewitz Carl von 1984 1832 Howard Michael Paret Peter eds On War Vom Krieg Indexed ed New Jersey Princeton University Press p 87 ISBN 978 0 691 01854 6 Holmes James R Everything You Know About Clausewitz Is Wrong thediplomat com Clausewitz s tombstone Clausewitz com Retrieved July 9 2018 Carl von Clausewitz Encyclopaedia Britannica 22 February 2024 Aron Raymond 1983 Clausewitz Philosopher of War Taylor amp Francis pp 12 14 ISBN 978 0710090096 a b c d e Bassford Christopher March 8 2016 Clausewitz and His Works Clausewitz com Retrieved July 9 2018 Bellinger Vanya Eftimova Marie von Clausewitz The Woman Behind the Making of On War New York London Oxford University Press 2015 ISBN 978 0 19 022543 8 a b Bellinger Vanya Eftimova January 6 2016 Five Things You Didn t Know About Carl von Clausewitz Real Clear Defense Retrieved 7 January 2016 See Timothy McCranor On the Pedagogical Intent of Clausewitz s On War MCU Journal vol 9 no 1 Spring 2018 pp 133 154 a b Smith Rupert The Utility of Force Penguin Books 2006 p 57 Paul Donker The Evolution of Clausewitz s Vom Kriege a reconstruction on the basis of the earlier versions of his masterpiece trans Paul Donker and Christopher Bassford ClausewitzStudies org August 2019 Paret Peter 2012 Clausewitz and Schlieffen as Interpreters of Frederick the Great Three Phases in the History of Grand Strategy Journal of Military History 76 3 837 845 Lynn Montross War Through the Ages 2nd ed 1946 p 583 Carl von Clausewitz On War originally Vom Kriege 3 vols Berlin 1832 34 The edition cited here was edited by Michael Howard and Peter Paret Princeton University Press 1984 pp 75 87 89 605 Summers Harry G Jr On Strategy A Critical Analysis of the Vietnam War Novato CA Presidio Press 1982 Bassford Christopher 2007 The Primacy of Policy and the Trinity in Clausewitz s Mature Thought In Strachan Hew Herberg Rothe Andreas eds Clausewitz in the Twenty First Century Proceedings of a March 2005 conference at Oxford Oxford University Press pp 74 90 Evan Luard ed 2016 Basic Texts in International Relations The Evolution of Ideas about International Society Springer p 244 ISBN 978 1349221073 a b c d e von Clausewitz Carl 1873 1832 On War Vom Krieg Translated by Graham J J London N Trubner amp Co Paret Clausewitz and the State The Man His Theories and His Times Heuser Beatrice 2007 Clausewitz Ideas of Strategy and Victory In Strachan Hew Herberg Rothe Andreas eds Clausewitz in the 21st Century Proceedings of a March 2005 conference at Oxford Oxford University Press pp 132 163 Handel Michael I 1986 Clausewitz and Modern Strategy Psychology Press p 71 ISBN 978 0714632940 Shepherd III Frederick L 2014 The Fog Of War Effects Of Uncertainty On Airpower Employment Pickle Partners p 9 ISBN 978 1782896807 This list is from Frequently Asked Questions about Clausewitz ClausewitzStudies org edited by Christopher Bassford a b Tip Toe Through the Trinity The Strange Persistence of Trinitarian Warfare by Christopher Bassford Moltke Helmuth 1892 Moltke His Life and His Character Sketched in Journals Letters Memoirs a Novel and Autobiographical Notes Translated by Herms Mary New York Harper amp Brothers Franklin Square p 35 Liddell Hart B H Strategy London Faber 1967 Second rev ed Bassford Christopher 15 February 2022 Clausewitz s Categories of War and the Supersession of Absolute War PDF Clausewitz Archived from the original PDF on 11 December 2022 Retrieved 26 October 2022 Brands Hal Suri Jeremi 2015 The Power of the Past History and Statecraft Brookings Institution Press p 147 ISBN 978 0815727132 John Keegan A History of Warfare 1993 Second edition 2004 p 3 a b c Bassford Christopher 1994 Clausewitz in English The Reception of Clausewitz in Britain and America 1815 1945 Oxford UP pp 20 21 ISBN 978 0195083835 Strachan Hew 2011 Clausewitz and the First World War Journal of Military History 75 2 367 391 Cormier Youri War As Paradox Clausewitz amp Hegel on Fighting Doctrines and Ethics Montreal amp Kingston McGill Queen s University Press 2016 http www mqup ca war as paradox products 9780773547698 php T Derbent Giap et Clausewitz editions ADEN Bruxelles 2006 Shirer p 80 Kipp Joseph W Lenin and Clausewitz the Militarization of Marxism 1914 1921 Military Affairs 1985 49 4 184 191 ISSN 0026 3931 In JSTOR a b Mertsalov A N Jomini versus Clausewitz pp 11 19 from Russia War Peace and Diplomacy edited by Mark and Ljubica Erickson London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson 2004 p 16 a b c Rapoport Anatol Introduction pp 11 82 from On War London Penguin 1968 Zhang Yuanlin 1999 Mao Zedongs Bezugnahme auf Clausewitz Archiv fur Kulturgeschichte 81 2 443 471 doi 10 7788 akg 1999 81 2 443 S2CID 183164307 Berkun Scott 2005 The Art of Project Management Beijing OŔeilly ISBN 978 0 596 00786 7 Joseph W Graham 2002 What the U S Military Can Do to Defeat Terrorism iUniverse p 7 ISBN 978 0595222599 Gaddis John Lewis We Now Know Oxford Oxford University Press 1997 1998 pp 233 234 Sheppard John E Jr September 1990 On War Is Clausewitz Still Relevant Parameters 20 3 85 99 Reiner Pommerin 2014 Clausewitz Goes Global Carl von Clausewitz in the 21st century BoD Books on Demand p 293 ISBN 978 3937885780 Martin van Creveld The Transformation of War The Most Radical Reinterpretation of Armed Conflict Since Clausewitz New York The Free Press 1991 Daniel Moran Clausewitz on Waterloo Napoleon at Bay in Carl von Clausewitz and Arthur Wellesley 1st Duke of Wellington On Waterloo Clausewitz Wellington and the Campaign of 1815 ed trans Christopher Bassford Daniel Moran and Gregory W Pedlow Clausewitz com 2010 p 242 n 11 See for instance John Keegan A History of Warfare New York Knopf 1993 passim Strachan Hew Herberg Rothe Andreas eds 2007 Clausewitz in the Twenty First Century Proceedings of a March 2005 conference at Oxford Oxford University Press Giuseppe Caforio Social sciences and the military an interdisciplinary overview 2006 p 221 For example Paley Norton 8 May 2014 Clausewitz Talks Business An Executive s Guide to Thinking Like a Strategist Boca Raton CRC Press p 224 ISBN 9781482220278 Retrieved 29 February 2024 Strategy Guideline 7 Develop Leadership Skills Compare Coker Christopher 15 May 2017 Rebooting Clausewitz On War in the Twenty First Century New York Oxford University Press p xx ISBN 9780190862749 Retrieved 29 February 2024 Had Clausewitz lived in the twenty first century he could have expected to have seen his book go into several editions Perhaps his work would be raided by editors in search of an endless series of quotes Perhaps while browsing airport bookshops we would find books with titles such as Clausewitz s Six Leadership Lessons Further reading editSee massive Clausewitz bibliographies in English French German etc on The Clausewitz Homepage bibliography section Aron Raymond Clausewitz Philosopher of War 1985 418 pp ISBN 0671628267 OCLC 13702496 Bassford Christopher Clausewitz in English The Reception of Clausewitz in Britain and America 1815 1945 New York Oxford University Press 1994 ISBN 0195083830 OCLC 27811623 Christopher Bassford Tiptoe Through the Trinity The Strange Persistence of Trinitarian Warfare Working paper Christopher Bassford Clausewitz s Categories of War and the Supersession of Absolute War Archived 2018 04 17 at the Wayback Machine Clausewitz com This is a working paper first posted in 2016 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Clausewitz Karl von Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 06 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 467 Cormier Youri Fighting Doctrines and Revolutionary Ethics Journal of Military and Security Studies Vol 15 No 1 2013 https web archive org web 20140729225332 http jmss synergiesprairies ca jmss index php jmss article view 519 Cormier Youri 2014 Hegel and Clausewitz Convergence on Method Divergence on Ethics The International History Review 36 3 419 442 doi 10 1080 07075332 2013 859166 S2CID 143665195 Cormier Youri War As Paradox Clausewitz amp Hegel on Fighting Doctrines and Ethics Montreal amp Kingston McGill Queen s University Press 2016 pp 183 232 Dimitriu George 2018 Clausewitz and the politics of war A contemporary theory Journal of Strategic Studies 43 5 1 41 doi 10 1080 01402390 2018 1529567 Donker Paul The Evolution of Clausewitz s Vom Kriege a reconstruction on the basis of the earlier versions of his masterpiece Trans Paul Donker and Christopher Bassford ClausewitzStudies org August 2019 Originally Die Entwicklung von Clausewitz Vom Kriege Eine Rekonstruktion auf der Grundlage der fruheren Fassungen seines Meisterwerks in the Clausewitz Gesellschaft s Jahrbuch2017 pp 14 39 Echevarria Antulio J II After Clausewitz German Military Thinkers before the Great War 2001 346 pp ISBN 0700610715 OCLC 44516530 Echevarria II Antulio J 2007 Clausewitz and Contemporary War doi 10 1093 acprof oso 9780199231911 001 0001 ISBN 978 0199231911 Gat Azar The Origins of Military Thought from the Enlightenment to Clausewitz 1989 ISBN 0198229488 OCLC 18779344 Handel Michael I ed Clausewitz and Modern Strategy 1986 324 pp ISBN 0714632945 OCLC 13214672 Handel Michael I Masters of War Classical Strategic Thought 2001 482 pages Based on comparison of Clausewitz s On War with Sun Tzu s The Art of War ISBN 0714681326 OCLC 318033033 Heuser Beatrice Reading Clausewitz 2002 238 pages ISBN 0 7126 6484 X Heuser Beatrice 2010 Small Wars in the Age of Clausewitz The Watershed Between Partisan War and People s War Journal of Strategic Studies 33 139 162 doi 10 1080 01402391003603623 S2CID 154880399 Holmes Terence M 2007 Planning versus Chaos in Clausewitz s On War Journal of Strategic Studies 30 129 151 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 472 9658 doi 10 1080 01402390701210855 S2CID 44042550 Sir Michael Howard Clausewitz 1983 originally a volume in the Oxford University Press Past Masters series reissued in 2000 as Clausewitz A Very Short Introduction ISBN 0 192 87608 2 OCLC 8709266 Bassford Christopher 1994 John Keegan and the Grand Tradition of Trashing Clausewitz A Polemic War in History 1 3 319 336 doi 10 1177 096834459400100305 S2CID 162660742 See critique of Keegan s arguments by Christopher Bassford John Keegan and the Grand Tradition of Trashing Clausewitz A Polemic War in History November 1994 pp 319 336 Kinross Stuart 2009 Clausewitz and America doi 10 4324 9780203089125 ISBN 978 0203089125 Mieszkowski Jan 2009 How to do Things with Clausewitz The Global South 3 18 29 doi 10 2979 GSO 2009 3 1 18 S2CID 143627760 Mertsalov A N Jomini versus Clausewitz pp 11 19 from Russia War Peace and Diplomacy edited by Mark and Ljubica Erickson London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson 2004 ISBN 0 297 84913 1 Paret Peter Clausewitz in His Time Essays in the Cultural and Intellectual History of Thinking about War New York and Oxford Berghahn Books 2015 Peter Paret 2010 Two Historians on Defeat in War and Its Causes Historically Speaking 11 3 2 8 doi 10 1353 hsp 0 0118 S2CID 162357305 Paret Peter Clausewitz and the State The Man His Theories and His Times Princeton Princeton University Press 1976 Paret Peter 2004 From Ideal to Ambiguity Johannes von Muller Clausewitz and the People in Arms Journal of the History of Ideas 65 101 111 doi 10 1353 jhi 2004 0021 S2CID 143173095 Rogers Clifford J 2002 Clausewitz Genius and the Rules The Journal of Military History 66 4 1167 1176 doi 10 2307 3093268 JSTOR 3093268 Paul Roques Le general de Clausewitz Sa vie et sa theorie de la guerre Paris Editions Astree 2013 ISBN 979 10 91815 01 7 http www editions astree fr BC Bon de commande Roques pdf Rothfels Hans Clausewitz pp 93 113 from The Makers of Modern Strategy edited by Edward Mead Earle Gordon A Craig amp Felix Gilbert Princeton N J Princeton University Press 1943 Sharma Vivek Swaroop 2015 A social theory of war Clausewitz and war reconsidered Cambridge Review of International Affairs 28 3 327 347 doi 10 1080 09557571 2013 872600 S2CID 144039698 Smith Hugh On Clausewitz A Study of Military and Political Ideas 2005 303 pp Stoker Donald J Clausewitz His Life and Work Oxford UP 2014 376 pp online review also excerpt Strachan Hew Herberg Rothe Andreas eds 2007 Clausewitz in the Twenty First Century doi 10 1093 acprof oso 9780199232024 001 0001 ISBN 978 0199232024 Strachan Hew and Andreas Herberg Rothe eds Clausewitz in the Twenty First Century 2007 excerpt and text search Sumida Jon Tetsuro 2001 The Relationship of History and Theory in on War The Clausewitzian Ideal and Its Implications The Journal of Military History 65 2 333 354 doi 10 2307 2677163 JSTOR 2677163 Sumida Jon Tetsuro Decoding Clausewitz A New Approach to On War Lawrence Kansas University Press of Kansas 2008 ISBN 978 0700616169 OCLC 213765799 Villacres Edward J and Bassford Christopher Reclaiming the Clausewitzian Trinity Parameters Autumn 95 pp 9 19 Wallach Jehuda L The Dogma of the Battle of Annihilation The Theories of Clausewitz and Schlieffen and Their Impact on the German Conduct of Two World Wars 1986 Waldman Thomas 2012 Clausewitz and the Study of War Defence Studies 13 3 345 374 doi 10 1080 14702436 2012 703843 ISSN 1470 2436 S2CID 153486360 Primary sources including translations edit Clausewitz Carl von Historical and Political Writings ed Peter Paret and Daniel Moran 1992 Clausewitz Carl von Vom Kriege Berlin Dummlers Verlag 1832 Clausewitz Carl von 1984 1976 Howard Michael Paret Peter eds On War trans ed Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 05657 9 Clausewitz Carl von On War abridged version translated by Michael Howard and Peter Paret edited with an introduction by Beatrice Heuser Oxford World s Classics Oxford University Press 2007 ISBN 978 0 19 954002 0 Clausewitz Carl von Principles of War Translated by Hans Gatske The Military Service Publishing Company 1942 Originally Die wichtigsten Grundsatze des Kriegfuhrens zur Erganzung meines Unterrichts bei Sr Koniglichen Hoheit dem Kronprinzen written 1812 Clausewitz Carl von Col J J Graham translator Vom Kriege On War Volume 1 Project Gutenberg eBook The full text of the 1873 English translation can be seen in parallel with the original German text at Compare VOM KRIEGE 1832 and ON WAR 1873 translation Archived 2018 11 11 at the Wayback Machine Compare VOM KRIEGE 1832 and ON WAR 1873 translation Archived 2018 11 11 at the Wayback Machine Clausewitz Karl von On War Trans O J Matthijs Jolles New York Random House 1943 Though not currently the standard translation this is increasingly viewed by many Clausewitz scholars as the most precise and accurate English translation Clausewitz Carl von 2018 Napoleon s 1796 Italian Campaign Trans and ed Nicholas Murray and Christopher Pringle Lawrence Kansas University Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0 7006 2676 2 Clausewitz Carl von 2020 Napoleon Absent Coalition Ascendant The 1799 Campaign in Italy and Switzerland Volume 1 Trans and ed Nicholas Murray and Christopher Pringle Lawrence Kansas University Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0 7006 3025 7 online review Clausewitz Carl von 2021 The Coalition Crumbles Napoleon Returns The 1799 Campaign in Italy and Switzerland Volume 2 Trans and ed Nicholas Murray and Christopher Pringle Lawrence Kansas University Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0 7006 3034 9 Clausewitz Carl von The Campaign of 1812 in RussiaArchived 2020 01 13 at the Wayback Machine Trans anonymous Wellington s friend Francis Egerton later Lord Ellesmere London John Murray Publishers 1843 Originally Carl von Clausewitz Hinterlassene Werke des Generals Carl von Clausewitz uber Krieg und Krieg fuhrung 10 vols Berlin 1832 37 Der Feldzug von 1812 in Russland in Vol 7 Berlin 1835 Clausewitz Carl von and Wellesley Arthur First Duke of Wellington ed trans Christopher Bassford Gregory W Pedlow and Daniel Moran On Waterloo Clausewitz Wellington and the Campaign of 1815 Clausewitz com 2010 This collection of documents includes in a modern English translation the whole of Clausewitz s study The Campaign of 1815 Strategic Overview Berlin 1835 ISBN 1 4537 0150 8 It also includes Wellington s reply to Clausewitz s discussion of the campaign as well as two letters by Clausewitz to his wife after the major battles of 1815 and other supporting documents and essays Clausewitz Carl von Two Letters on Strategy Ed trans Peter Paret and Daniel Moran Carlisle Army War College Foundation 1984 External links editCarl von Clausewitz at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource Mind Map of On War Clausewitz homepage large amounts of information Corn Tony Clausewitz in Wonderland Policy Review September 2006 This is an article hostile to Clausewitz and the Clausewitzians See also reply by Clausewitz Homepage Clausewitz s self appointed PR Flack Works by Carl von Clausewitz at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Carl von Clausewitz at Internet Archive Works by Carl von Clausewitz at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp The Influence of Clausewitz on Jomini s Le Precis de l Art de la Guerre Two Letters On Strategy addressed to the Prussian general staff officer Major von Roeder respectively of 22 and 24 December 1827 Erfourth M amp Bazin A 2014 Clausewitz s Military Genius and the Human Dimension The Bridge Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Carl von Clausewitz amp oldid 1223598404, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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