World War II Infantry Anti-Tank Tactics
By (Author) Gordon L. Rottman
Illustrated by Steve Noon
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Osprey Publishing
25th February 2005
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Second World War
Modern warfare
Military and defence strategy
940.541
Paperback
64
Width 184mm, Height 248mm, Spine 7mm
252g
The battlefield interaction between infantry and tanks was central to combat on most fronts in World War II. The first Blitzkrieg campaigns saw the tank achieve a new dominance. New infantry tactics and weapons some of them desperately dangerous had to be adopted, while the armies raced to develop more powerful anti-tank guns and new light weapons. By 1945, a new generation of revolutionary shoulder-fired AT weapons was in widespread use. This book explains in detail the shifting patterns of anti-tank combat, illustrated with photographs, diagrams and colour plates showing how weapons were actually employed on the battlefield.
Gordon L Rottman entered the US Army in 1967, volunteered for Special Forces and completed training as a weapons specialist. He was assigned to the 7th Special Forces Group until reassigned to the 5th Special Forces Group in Vietnam in 196970. A highly respected and established author, Gordon is now a civilian contract Special Operations Forces Intelligence Specialist at the Army's Joint Readiness Center, Ft Polk. Steve Noon was born in Kent, UK, and attended art college in Cornwall. He has had a life-long passion for illustration and since 1985 has worked as a professional artist. Steve has provided award-winning illustrations for renowned publishers Dorling Kindersley, where his interest in historical illustration began.