Guderian

by Kenneth Macksey

Published 20 November 1975
The officer most responsible for creating bl itzkrieg in World War II, Guderian built the Panzer Force in the face of opposition from the German General Staff, and p ersonally led the lightning campaigns that put Europe under German domination. '

Why the Germans Lose at War

by Kenneth Macksey

Published 30 September 1999
_This book is a brilliant account of German military history which makes for thought-provoking reading_. **Military Modelcraft International** The German armed forces suffered crushing defeat in the last century. Kenneth Macksey examines the reasons behind these catastrophic military failures. Were they the random fortunes of war, or the inevitable result of a particular structure, leadership and history? A nation with few natural defensive boundaries, Germany traditionally had to struggle to survive, and developed an aggressive and militant outlook. Its great strengths were the brilliance of individual generals and military thinkers, the innovative development of the military forces, and the skill and tenacity of the fighting men. Set against all this was a short-term war policy, a tendency to underestimate the enemy and believe its own propaganda, and the politicisation of the military staffs. These and many other factors were to lead Germany from nineteenth-century success, and dreams of world domination, to twentieth-century defeat.