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An Army of Influence

An Army of Influence

An Army of Influence

Eighty Years of Regional Engagement
Craig Stockings, University of New South Wales, Sydney
Peter Dennis, University of New South Wales, Sydney
November 2021
Hardback
9781316514399
AUD$72.95
inc GST
Hardback
USD
eBook

    The importance of regional cooperation is becoming more apparent as the world moves into the third decade of the 21st century. An Army of Influence is a thought-provoking analysis of the Australian Army's capacity to change, with a particular focus on the Asia-Pacific region. Written by highly regarded historians, strategists and practitioners, this book examines the Australian Army's influence abroad and the lessons it has learnt from its engagement across the Asia-Pacific region. It also explores the challenges facing the Australian Army in the future and provides principles to guide operational, administrative and modernisation planning. Containing full-colour maps and images, An Army of Influence will be of interest to both the wider defence community and general readers. It underscores the importance of maintaining an ongoing presence in the region and engages with history to address the issues facing the Army both now and into the future.

    • Written by highly regarded highly regarded historians, strategists and practitioners
    • Full-colour maps and images
    • An academically rigorous exploration of the Australian Army's engagement in the region that seeks to drive scholarly enquiry

    Product details

    November 2021
    Adobe eBook Reader
    9781009086141
    0 pages
    This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.

    Table of Contents

    • Introduction Ian Langford
    • Part I. The Concept of an Army's Influence Abroad:
    • 1. Eighty Years of Regional Engagement David Horner
    • 2. The Australian Army through the Lens of Australian Defence White Papers since 1976 Brendan Sargeant
    • 3. Defence Attaché in Indonesia: Lessons from 20 Years Ago Ken Brownrigg
    • Part II. Lessons from Past Relationships:
    • 4. General Blamey and the Backroom Boys: Colonel Conlon and Army's Adaptation and Access in the Pacific and Asia, 1942-1946 Graeme Sligo
    • 5. 'Not rich in standing armies or immediately available resources': Plans, realities and the Australian Regular Army's deployment to Korea, 1950 Dayton McCarthy
    • 6. Helping the Americans help the Vietnamese? Defence engagement with the RVN, 1955-1975 Tom Richardson
    • 7. East Timor and the crisis of 1999: a case study on the limitations of relationships Craig Stockings
    • 8. Onward & Onya: The involvement, interaction and influence of the New Zealand and Australian Armies Stephen Clarke
    • Part III. Ongoing Relationships:
    • 9. Access but how much influence? An historical overview of Australia-Indonesia army-to-army cooperation Garth Pratten
    • 10. An Army of Influence: Australia's military engagement with Malaysia 1955–2020 Richard Niessl
    • 11. Cambodia – More than 'a Signals Show' Peter Bartu
    • 12. Was the Juice Worth the Squeeze? Australian Defence Force Investment in Nation Building in Bougainville and the Solomon Islands Reuben Bowd
    • 13. Achieving influence through advising relationships Deborah Jeppesen
    • 14. Training Teams as a Force of Choice: Building Partner Capacity in the Philippines Luke Holloway
    • 15 A perspective on diplomacy in Army's contemporary regional relationship building Fergus McFarlane.
      Contributors
    • David Horner, Brendan Sargeant, Ken Brownrigg, Graeme Silgo, Dayton McCarthy, Tom Richardson, Stephen Clarke, Garth Pratten, Richard Neissel, Peter Barrtu, Reuben Bowd, Deborah Jeppesen, Luke Holloway, Fergus McFarlane, Ian Langford

    • Editors
    • Craig Stockings , University of New South Wales, Sydney

      Craig Stockings is a Professor of History at the University of New South Wales, Canberra, and is currently appointed as the Official Historian of Australian Operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, and Australian Peacekeeping Operations in East Timor.

    • Peter Dennis , University of New South Wales, Sydney

      Peter Dennis is Emeritus Professor of History, University of New South Wales, Canberra.