There is a lot of military history out there. There’s even a lot of strategic history out there. What’s the difference? Military history is typically concerned with the conduct of military engagements or operations, or with the personnel involved. John Keegan, David Glantz, Rick Atkinson are good examples of good military historians. Strategic history takes these same elements, but adds in something lacking in military history. This final element is a meaningful discussion of how these military means served, or were meant to serve, the strategic aims of those directing them. It may also refer to literature which details the history of military or strategic thought, or opposition to it. Strategic history as a field of literature is necessarily much smaller than military history because it wrestles with bigger (and generally more interesting) questions.
A History f Military Thought, Azar Gat
The most significant tome (and it honestly is a tome) on the development of military thought is this one. Its remit stretches from the Enlightenment to the Cold War. Actually three books compressed into a single volume for convenience, it is an enormously thorough book on the development of European military thought during the two centuries it covers. It is required reading.
The Leverage of Sea Power, Colin S. Gray
This book does not really put forward any new arguments, but rather it condenses the history of (primarily European) naval warfare and some of the major strands of naval thought into a single easy to read volume. It is insistent on its argument that while navies do have great significance, and the author notes that in the last few centuries it has been virtually unheard of for the maritime alliance to have lost the war, ultimately it must have an effect on goings-on on the land.
The Evolution of Strategy, Beatrice Heuser
I admit to not having finished this book yet, primarily because I have been so incredibly busy lately. However, it is a magisterial work that covers the evolution of strategic thought from before the actual introduction of the work into Western languages through to the present day. The wealth, not just of information but of knowledge, packed into this book is stunning, and the bibliography is on its own possibly one of the longest chapters in the book, at 60+ pages.
Michael Howard
It is impossible to recommend only a single book by Michael Howard, when they are all so very interesting. Many are very small, and all are very readable. He was the man who virtually reinvented the concept of strategic history during the Cold War period. He has written on an incredible number of topics—from a critique of Liddell Hart’s concept of the British way in warfare to the Franco-Prussian War to war and the liberal conscience to the invention of peace and the reinvention of war. Go read it all.
Military Logistics and Strategc Performance, Thomas M. Kane
Originally a PhD thesis, this is one of the quite few works which examines the link between military logistics and strategic performance. Its case studies range from the Burma and Pacific campaigns during World War 2 through to Communist logistics in Vietnam and the contemporary revolution in military affairs. The role highlighted for logistics as the “arbiter of opportunity” is necessarily a very important one, which puts logistics in its proper place in strategic theory.
The Making of Peace, Williamson Murray & Jim Lacey (eds)
This book is a very important book, as it is one of the few that tries to link strategy to peace making, at least to some extent. An edited collection, its essays range from the Peace of Nicias during the Peloponnesian Wars through to the Congress of Vienna, Versailles, the end of the Second World War and onset of the Cold War, and the end of the Cold War. It very importantly notes how messy peace making can be, and how it can also result in new wars further down the line.
The Making of Strategy, Williamson Murray, Macgregor Knox & Alvin Bernstein (eds)
The original making of book (to which the previous entry is a sort of sequel fifteen years later), this book makes the important note about how messy strategy making can be, and tends to be. Essays range from the Peloponnesian War to the strategy of Habsburg Spain to that of Louis XIV to the strategies of nearly all major powers during the Second World War to Israeli strategy during the Cold War.
Williamson Murray
Murray is clearly an impressive author, and he has written much. He has been acknowledged as one of the foremost military and strategic historians alive today, and his books range from the strategy the Luftwaffe pursued during the war to military innovation during WW1, the interwar years and WW2 (in three volumes), an operational history of WW2, an account of the 2003 invasion of Iraq and much more. His newest book will be another edited volume on the shaping of grand strategy, to be published in the next few months.
Douglas Porch
Porch is another distinguished historian, and whose particular expertise concerns the French. He has written authoritative accounts on the French Foreign Legion, on the conquest of the Sahara and of Morocco, and on the French secret services. One of his most recent books is a very interesting perspective on the Mediterranean theater during the Second World War, and he argues that it was a dramatic strategic failure for the Germans to get involved, as it eventually lead the British and later Americans to learn how actually to fight the Germans, experience they would not have otherwise had.
N.A.M. Rodger
A major British naval historian, Rodger has taken it upon himself to examine the history of the Royal Navy in three massive volumes. I’ve only read the middle one yet (and the third hasn’t been published yet) but they are packed with so much that they are necessary reads for anyone interested in the RN or the wars it was engaged in. It deals with all aspects of the RN, from its operations to its social culture to the bureaucracy that underpinned it. Nothing has been left out.
Russell F. Weigley
A prominent American military historian during the Cold War, Weigley wrote the original treatise on the American way of war (a concept is still the center of a debate to this day, and one of the forerunners of the idea of strategic culture). By the ends of his books he tends to be consistently pessimistic on the utility of war, an opinion which he rarely seems to really support adequately, but his books nonetheless wrestle with big ideas and big timelines and are generally quite interesting.