
Published online:
14 September 2011
Published in print:
03 July 2006
Online ISBN:
9780813134819
Print ISBN:
9780813124032
Contents
Chapter
3 The Struggle for an Innovative Doctrine and a Combat Car
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Pages
120–155
-
Published:July 2006
Cite
Hofmann, George F., 'The Struggle for an Innovative Doctrine and a Combat Car', Through Mobility We Conquer: The Mechanization of U.S. Cavalry (Lexington, KY , 2006; online edn, Kentucky Scholarship Online, 14 Sept. 2011), https://doi.org/10.5810/kentucky/9780813124032.003.0005, accessed 14 May 2025.
Abstract
This chapter examines the U.S.'s struggle to develop an innovative cavalry doctrine and a mechanized force. During the 1920s, the course of developing mechanization had been deflected by the president's national military strategy, budget restrictions, the Depression, and the mind-set of the traditional line branches. It was only in 1930 that the idea of mechanized force became a goal, because it offered a new way of warfare based on flexibility, maneuverability, mobility and speed, and surprise.
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