
Goliath
What the West got Wrong about Russia and Other Rogue States
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Narrated by:
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Joe Knezevich
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By:
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Sean McFate
About this listen
Penguin presents the audiobook edition of Goliath, written by Sean McFate, read by Joe Knezevich.
Everything you think you know about war is wrong.
War is timeless. Some things change - weapons, tactics, leadership - but our desire to go into battle does not.
We are in the midst of an age of conflict: global terrorism, Russia's resurgence and China's rise, international criminal empires, climate change and dwindling natural resources.
The stakes are high, and we are dangerously unprepared.
As a former paratrooper and military contractor, Sean McFate has been on the front lines of deep state conflicts. He has seen firsthand the horrors of battle and as a strategist, understands the complexity of the current military situation.
The West is playing the same old war games, but the enemy has changed the rules.
In this new age of war, technology will not save us; victory will belong to the cunning, not the strong; plausible deniability is more potent than firepower; corporations, mercenaries, and rogue states have more power than nation states; and loyalty will sit with the highest bidder.
This is The Art of War for the 21st century. Adapt and we can prevail. Fail, and size and strength won't protect us. Learn how to triumph in the coming age of conflict in 10 new rules.
©2019 Sean McFate (P)2019 Penguin AudioFrom a strategic viewpoint, McFates strategic tales offer the strategist a perspective that can assist them in better understanding situation(s) that may not be as they appear.
For the casual leader McFates provides a blend of historic and present day military accounts that will raise more than one eyebrow, furthermore his message of what furture wars will look like will provide all readers with food for thought long after reading.
Overall this book and audiable performance was excellent with my omly criticism being that somepoints need not have required such lengthy explanations.
A lesson in Strategy
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A must read
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critique of empire.
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A salutary warning for future leaders
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Call to arms
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I have three main issues with this book-
1) In making the material accessible, a lot of the discussion on military kit and capabilities loses a lot of nuance and borders on reductive. Other reviewers have pointed out factual errors but “expensive kit is a waste of money” is done to death in this book and frankly it begins to treat the reader like an idiot.
2) The narrative themes in this book(“conventional war is dead - why are we spending so much on preparing for it? Our enemies are doing asymmetric warfare and we’re being left behind”) now serves more as a record of American post-GWoT thinking on the fringes and less as the stark warning it was written to be. The west appears to have achieved a strategic asymmetric/hybrid/grey-space victory given what Russia has done to itself in Ukraine, and through that lens this book feels very dated in places.
3) the writing style labours some of the author’s key points to the point of nausea and the first chapter in particular could be significantly shorter. The repetition gets quite annoying when combined with the dated bits mentioned above.
I persevered as long as possible but gave up about a third of the way in.
Has aged poorly since Ukrainian invasion
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He seems to have re-labelled Hybrid Warfare as 'Shadow Warfare' but claims they are different without explaining why. McFate seems to be constantly attempting to coin phrases which are repackaged from other academics. I agree with some of his challenges of modern received wisdom on what success looks like but he comes across as revisionist for the sake of it, and to sell a book to military commanders who want to appear modern!
A few thought-provoking points but nothing new.
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