The First Helicopter War: Logistics and Mobility in Algeria, 1954-1962
By (Author) Charles R. Shrader
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th June 1999
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Military and defence strategy
965.046
Hardback
304
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
680g
Using recently released French official documents and a variety of other sources, this study explains how the French Army, so recently defeated by the Viet Minh insurgents in Indochina, was able to successfully defeat the Algerian nationalist rebels on the battlefield, while nevertheless losing the war at the conference table. This French success, between 1954 and 1962, was due in large part to the superior logistical system of the French Army and the use of the helicopter to enhance French operational mobility. French counter-mobility measures, particularly the construction of heavily defended interdiction zones on the eastern and western borders of Algeria, proved highly effective against the rebels. Such methods essentially cut off the rebel forces from their bases and from sources of supply located outside Algeria, and consequently strangled and destroyed the rebel forces within Algeria. No other work on the Algerian War focuses upon the role of logistics in the outcome of the conflict. The detailed statistical data and comprehensive description and analysis of the logistical organizations and methods of both the French and the nationalist rebels are supplemented by excellent maps. This study also provides useful insights into the nature of the "wars of national liberation" and counter-insurgency doctrines that dominated military affairs in the mid-20th century.
The First Helicopter War is an important, even definitive, study and will be of interest to all those studying in wars of insurgency. Shrader's statistical information is impressive, even a bit daunting, but those who make the effort will be rewarded.-The Journal of Military History
"The First Helicopter War is an important, even definitive, study and will be of interest to all those studying in wars of insurgency. Shrader's statistical information is impressive, even a bit daunting, but those who make the effort will be rewarded."-The Journal of Military History
CHARLES R. SHRADER, an independent historian and consultant, currently serves as the executive director of the Society for Military History. His other books include U.S. Military Logistics, 1607-1991: A Research Guide (Greenwood, 1992) and Communist Logistics in the Korean War (Greenwood, 1995).