 |
|  | [ Home > Back Issues > Military History Quarterly ]
  MHQ Spring 2007 Vol. 19, No. 3 SOFTCOVERWARRIOR MAO - by Geoffrey Perret. Experience gained fighting the Japanese and Chiang Kai-shek helped a dynamic military leader take on the United States twice, to victory and a draw.
BANKROLLING THE BATTLE OF YORKTOWN - by Barbara A. Mitchell. Gold and silver from Havana enabled Washington’s troops to trap Lord Cornwallis.
ANY MEASURE WHICH MAY BEST SUBDUE THE ENEMY - by James M. McPherson. Abraham Lincoln assumed numerous presidential powers not specified in the U.S. Constitution.
TESTING THE ‘MYSTERY OF THE ENGLISH’ - by Gervase Phillips. During the mid-sixteenth-century siege of Boulogne, a French commander determined to disprove the long-held belief that Englishmen were superior soldiers.
RETURN TO ARNHEM - by Sidney Urquhart. A British Airborne Corps intelligence officer raised serious questions about Operation Market-Garden, but was dismissed days before the invasion failed.
ROME'S BARBARIAN MERCENARIES - by David G. Frye. Surrounded by enemies, the Romans increasingly relied on barbarians to fill their legions’ depleted ranks—with disastrous consequences.
THE PERFECT FAILURE - by John Prados. Forty-five years later, it’s still unclear who deserves the blame for the Bay of Pigs fiasco.
Price includes shipping and handling.
|
 |  |  |  |