r of the situation, but
they will not obey a chuckle-head if he has nothing in his favor but
his rank.
XXIX
In any action in which the several services are joined, any American
officer may expect the same measure of respect from the ranks of any
other service as from his own, provided he conducts himself with a
dignity and manner becoming an American officer.
For all officers, due reflection on these points, relating to the
character of our men in war, is not more important than a continuing
study of how they may be applied to all aspects of training, toward
the end that we may further strengthen our own system. This is the
grand object in all military studies. That service is most perfect
which best holds itself, at all times and at all levels, in a state of
readiness to move against and destroy any declared enemy of the United
States.
APPENDIX ONE
RECOMMENDED READING
Army Historical Division--Okinawa: The Last Battle, 1949.
Omaha Beachhead, 1946.
H. H. Arnold--Global Mission, 1949.
Basil Bartlett--My First War, 1941.
William Liscum Borden--There Will Be No Time, 1946.
David L. Brainard--The Outpost of the Lost, 1929.
Bernard Brodie--A Guide to Navy Strategy, 1944.
The Absolute Weapon, 1946.
Vannevar Bush--Modern Arms and Free Men, 1949.
Winston S. Churchill--The World Crisis, 1931.
The Unknown War, 1931.
The River War, 1933.
Marlborough: His Life and Times, 1933-35.
A Roving Commission, 1939.
The Second World War, 1948--.
Hugh M. Cole--The Lorraine Campaign, 1950.
W. F. Craven and J. L. Cate--The Army Air Forces in World War II,
1948--.
Edward S. Creasy--Decisive Battles of the World, 1862.
James P. S. Devereux--The Story of Wake Island, 1947.
Giulio Douhet--Command of the Air, 1927.
Clifford Dowdey--Experiment in Rebellion, 1946.
Theodore Draper--The Six Weeks' War, 1944.
Dwight D. Eisenhower--Crusade in Europe, 1948.
Report by the Supreme Commander, 1946.
George Fielding Eliot--The Ramparts We Watch, 1938.
If Russia Strikes, 1949.
Charles W. Elliott--Winfield Scott, 1937.
Cyril F
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