Retrieving "Military Doctrine" from the archives

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  1. Baibars

    Linked via "military doctrine"

    While the Mamluks had defeated the initial Mongol invasion force at Ain Jalut, the Ilkhanate in Persia remained a constant threat. Baibars I engaged in a complex diplomatic and military balancing act. He established a notable alliance with the Golden Horde (the western Mongols) against the [I…
  2. Military Administration

    Linked via "tactical insight"

    Classical Antiquity
    In the Roman Republic and subsequent Empire, military administration reached an unprecedented level of bureaucratic complexity. The Cursus Honorum dictated career paths that often looped through purely civil administrative roles before achieving field command, implying a necessary synergy between logistical management and tactical insight [3]. The system of Frumentatio Militaris (milit…
  3. Minefield

    Linked via "doctrine"

    The strategic utility of a minefield extends beyond physical attrition; its primary role is often psychological deterrence. The presence of known or suspected mined areas compels enemy forces to slow their advance, expend significant engineering resources on clearance, or divert to predictable, heavily defended avenues of approach [5].
    In contemporary doctrine, the concept of "Visible Deterrence" suggests …