Phillips P. OBrien Profile picture
Mar 20, 2022 20 tweets 5 min read Read on X
Ok, some people have asked for a summary of my views on war (why my analysis of the Ukraine war has been so pointed), so I thought I would make this thread with reference to my research (where possible free or library access material).
My view of war is in many ways profoundly boring. War is a struggle about the control of communications--which run from the raw materials needed to produce a good until that good is delivered to the battlefield.
It argues that the focus on bravery/cowardice of destruction/tragedy while compelling as a human story, tells us nothing of value about why wars are won and lost.
My most well known book outlined this thesis for World War II, and is entitled How the War was Won (Cambridge Univ Press, 2015). Its brutally long at 250,000 words so dont read it unless your a masochist. Here is a brief summary. voxeu.org/article/how-wa…
If you want to see the book, here is the amazon link. From the start it argues that battles distort our understanding of what is important in the war. That control of communications and the air/sea war were far more important than the land war. amazon.com/gp/product/B00…
It was controversial because it has been accused of diminishing the importance of the Eastern Front. I dont believe thats true--the Eastern Front was important, it just got a surprisingly small amount of war production. Here are two screen shots from the introduction. ImageImage
I also wrote a synthesis work on the logistics of the war, which discusses the things we are seeing in Ukraine today (the need to coordinate rail and road (trucks and trains) to supply a large modern army. You should be able to get online library access. cambridge.org/core/books/abs…
Basically, if you dont put alot of effort into building and maintaining your logistics, doesnt matter how great your army is or how snazzy your uniforms are. You will lose.
Finally for a grand strategic perspective, Ive written a biography of FDR's chief of staff in WWII, and the highest ranking US military officer in the war, Admiral William Leahy. Image
Leahy (along with FDR) had a communications based understanding of strategy, as opposed to the battle-centric vision of George Marshall. Leahy was also far more influential than Marshall--while Roosevelt lived. Here is a free summary. historynet.com/roosevelts-rig…
You might have heard of Leahy as that strange military man who did not want to drop the atom bomb or invade Japan--and that is true. He saw no point in either, believing Japan was defeated in 1945 because it had lost control of its communications.
Here is a link to the bio if you want to see more. Again its a bit wordy, but hopefully not too boring. amazon.com/gp/product/B07…
So my view of war is that its about the control of communications (movement) and requires highly professional, motivated and high morale personnel (actually these are symbiotic qualities). It is about the operation of complex systems.
What we have seen so far in Ukraine is a Russian inability to operate the systems they would need to succeed and the Ukrainians able to operate the systems they need to stop them--often by disrupting Russian communications. Sorry for the length!
I’ve also done alot of my current research on the present and future of air power, as AirPower is one of my specialties . Here is a link to a conference with podcasts on the subject. isws.wp.st-andrews.ac.uk/events-and-con…
The inability of the Russians to gain control of the air, was such a fundamental failing of modern complex systems warfare, that it also instantly called into question their overall war fighting ability in my analysis
Final piece of research, a free access team-written article in the Journal of Strategic Studies. Discusses how management studies literature and the concept of strategy as practice holds out important lessons for how strategic studies discusses strategy. tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.10…
It indicates (I hope) that Ive had some longer concerns than this war with how the strategic studies community conceptualizes its work. Management studies (or organizational studies) can actually teach us alot. If we are willing to listen.
Think I need to update this thread as some have intimated my research is about doing war better. Actually, as I hope Ive made clear in other threads, my research points out that war is almost always a disaster, because its really hard and spins out of control.
In particular the side launching the war normally unleashes a disaster on itself and a humanitarian catastrophe on others. So the impact of the research will hopefully be--dont attempt to go to war. You wont like the results.

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More from @PhillipsPOBrien

Nov 20
Which calls have I gotten wrong on the war @Dominic2306 ? You were the one who wanted to sacrifice Ukraine to Russia in 2022 as it had no chance. I will take you through my positions.
1) In January 2022 I wrote that a Russian invasion of Ukraine would be a catastrophe, would not be over soon and that Ukraine would fight and Russia was an overrated power. thecritic.co.uk/the-new-appeas…Image
Then, when Russia did invade, and it did go wrong, I said exactly that, that Russian maximalist war aims were a failure and by that standard they cannot win the war (and they are not winning the war by that standard). Btw, you were the one who was arguing Ukraine had no chance.
Read 18 tweets
Nov 13
Good lord, an outright Putin apologist is named to be head of US national intelligence
Good lord 2, Matt Gaetz as Attorney General. The GOP seems hellbent on turning the US Government over to Russia.
Do any Republican Senators have a backbone? Any?
Read 5 tweets
Aug 27
Good Morning Everyone in North America. Today is the day that The Strategists (my latest book) is released--and you can start reading it now. Its the story of how Churchill, Roosevelt, Stalin, Mussolini and Hitler were formed as strategists, and from that how they fought WWII. penguinrandomhouse.com/books/623808/t…
Its been widely and positively reviewed (with more to come) with my favorite endorsement from Margaret Atwood. If you want to get a flavor of the book, I was able to release a 3000 word excerpt on Churchill's experiences on the Western Front in 1915-16 phillipspobrien.substack.com/p/the-strategi…
Image
I really hope you enjoy it! And though the book has only been available for a few hours in the USA, it already has 2 5-star reviews on Amazon. My family has been up early! Image
Read 5 tweets
Aug 19
Worth noting that President Zelensky said openly last night that one of the Ukrainian strategic aims was to create a buffer zone inside Russia to provide protection to Ukraine (and also inevitably to draw Russian forces to it). It shows how the early analysis of this offensive was dreadful. edition.cnn.com/2024/08/18/eur…
This offensive was passed of as a wasteful raid--but so far the Ukrainians have achieved a number of strategic aims, and are well on their way to establishing a large buffer, as Ive bee saying for ten days. I described it in my last two weekend updates.
In this podcast which @MBielieskov and I recorded 10 days ago, the idea of creating a salient was discussed in detail. open.substack.com/pub/phillipspo…
Read 5 tweets
May 5
The @CSIS Interpret China resource has assembled a number of very interesting sources on how the Chinese state is thinking about and reacting to the Russo-Ukraine War. It is a really helpful one-stop shop that anyone interested in the subject should examine.interpret.csis.org
One report. by a leading Chinese scholar, talks about how Russia is trying to recalibrate its global relationships, and how the Chinese-Russian alliance, while strong, is no longer the "limitless" partnerships that was proclaimed before the invasion. interpret.csis.org/translations/t…
Another really interesting Chinese analysis looks at 2024, and argues that after the US election, there might be a push for a peace deal. Also tries to think about the future development of warfare, and how China can adjust to a battlefield full of masses of cheap UAVs interpret.csis.org/translations/a…
Read 5 tweets
May 4
And the battle lines have (at least temporarily) stabilized after all the doom and gloom of the last few weeks. No great Russian breakthroughs and exploitations, some small, incremental advances at very high cost. With Ukraine getting more ammunition, Russian losses might even rise.
UK Intelligence estimates 465000 Russian casualties so far--an staggering figure. The Russians are generating soldiers, but losing them at an astounding clip. The disregard of the Russian leadership for their own people is one reason Ukraine must win.
Actually, UK intelligence estimates OVER 465,000 Russian casualties--fighting just Ukraine. This is one of the most futile military campaigns in modern history.
Read 5 tweets

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