| City Fights: Selected Histories of Urban Combat from World War II to Vietnam | 
                    
                    
                                                    
                                | Authors: | Antal, John | 
                                                                        
                                                                            
                                | Publisher: | Random House Publishing Group | 
                                                                            
                                | BISAC/Subject: | HIS027100, HIS027070, HIS027000 | 
                                                                        
                            | ISBN: | 9780307414762, Related ISBNs:                                    0307414760, 0891417818, 9780307414762, 9780891417811 | 
                        
                            | Classification: | Non-Fiction | 
                        
                            | Number of pages: | 464, | 
                                                                            
                                | Audience: | General/trade | 
                        
                    
                
                                    Synopsis: “Urban terrain will likely be the   predominant battlefield of future wars.”
 As September 11 and Somalia proved, hostile   forces are now engaging America differently, avoiding open combat with our enormous   military, striking at our civic centers or dragging us into theirs. But urban warfare   isn’t new; it is as old as the battle of Jericho. Now an incomparable collection   written by esteemed military veterans—some currently serving, others civilian analysts—re-creates   the last century’s most astonishing examples of this kind of fighting . . . and   offers important lessons for our future.
Here are fourteen riveting histories that   are both invaluable teaching tools for security leaders and engrossing accounts for   any reader. They include
 • William M. Waddell’s “Tai-Erh-Chuang, 1938: The Japanese   Juggernaut Smashed”—How China defeated the Japanese in battle for the first time   in three hundred and forty years, by using a city only as a pivot area and attacking   the exposed flank and rear ranks of its unprepared enemy.
 • Eric M. Walters’s “Stalingrad,   1942: With Will, a Weapon, and a Watch”—The largest and longest-running urban fight   of the twentieth century, in which the Red Army became the tortoise to the Germans’   hare, out-lasting its stronger foe.
 • Norm Cooling’s “Hue City, 1968: Winning a   Battle While Losing a War”—The six-day fight for the cultural center of Vietnam revealed   how the American military’s distrust of the media made it fail to expose the enemy’s   mass executions and lose the all-important information war.
And these eleven additional accounts:
“Warsaw, 1944: Uprising in Eastern Europe” by Maj. David M. Toczek
 “Arnhem, 1944: Airborne Warfare in the City” by Lt. Col. G. A. Lofaro
 “Troyes, France, 1944: All Guns Blazing” By Col. Peter R. Mansoor
 “Budapest, 1944-45: Bloody Contest of Wills” by Col. Peter B. Zwack
 “Aschaffenburg, 1945: Cassino on the Main River” by Mark J. Reardon
 “Manila, 1945: City Fight in the Pacific” by Col. Kevin C. M. Benson
 “Berlin, 1945: Backs Against the Wall” by Maj. Mike Boden
 “Jaffa, 1948: Urban Combat in the Israeli War of Independence” by Benjamin Runkle
 “Seoul, 1950: City Fight after Inchon” by Maj. Thomas A. Kelley
 “Da Nang-Hoi An, A Tank Skirmish in Quang Nam Province” by Dennis C. Fresch
 “Evolution of Urban Combat Doctrine” by Mark J. Reardon
 From the 1944 Warsaw   uprising that almost caused the complete destruction of Poland’s capital to the crucial,   near-forgotten fight for Manila in 1945 . . . from snipers and shoulder-launched   missiles to tunnels and tanks . . . all aspects of the most important urban conflicts   are revealed in stunning detail. Compelling and cautionary, City Fights powerfully   reminds us that, in our ever more urbanized and vulnerable world, “if a state loses   its cities, it loses the war.”