Episodes
US Special Operations Command, or SOCOM, is divided up into the following. I will talk about each individual unit listed.
Army: 75th Ranger Regiment, Special Forces (Green Berets), 160th SOAR (Night Stalkers)
Navy: SEALs, and SWCCs (Special Warfare Combatant-craft Crewmen)Air Force: Pararescuemen (PJs), Combat Controllers (CCTs)Marine Corps: Marine Force ReconJoint: Delta Force, DEVGRU, 24th Special Tactics Squadron, Intelligence Support Activity
For more information, read:
US Special Forces...
Published 05/04/09
This episode answers four basic questions:
Why were both North and South so unprepared for war?Which side had the initial advantage?Did the South have to secede? Did the North have to respond with military force?Was Northern victory inevitable?
For information on sources, email me.
Published 04/24/09
Vicksburg was a Confederate fortress guarding the Mississippi River during the American Civil War. It was the only thing stopping the Union from taking control of the all-powerful Mississippi waterway. Although the Vicksburg Campaign is most famously associated with General Ulysses Grant (whose capture of the fortress is considered a major turning point in the war), there were many earlier Union campaigns to take control of Vicksburg. One of these campaigns, led by Navy Admiral David...
Published 01/29/09
Why has democracy failed in Iraq? Here are some potential theories, with their originators in parentheses:
Modernization (Rostow, Lipset): Iraq is not wealthy, urban,
modern, or secular enough to support democracy. It has not followed
the same path to development that Western democracies have set out, and
thus, it is not yet ready.Cultural (Huntington, Weber): Iraqis are not inherently suitable
for democracy, simply because their culture favors an authoritarian
style of government.Marxist...
Published 11/21/08
This episode focuses on the decision-making strategies that President
Bush used in December of 2006 before choosing to commit the troop
surge. Things discussed include: the release of the Iraq Study Group
Report, the 2006 midterm elections, Bush's meeting with Generals Keane
and Downing, and Bush's relationship with General Petraeus and
Secretary Gates. At the end of the episode is a recap on the success
of the troop surge, as well as an analysis of President Bush's
leadership during...
Published 10/19/08
Whether they are seen as acts of God, or as simple climate-related
occurrences, natural events have always had a sizeable impact on
military operations. At the small end of the scale are the little changes in terrain or weather that may affect a battle or a small war. For
example, many armies have postponed their campaigns due to inclement
weather conditions, and many militaries have suffered from rampant
disease. On the other end of the scale are the
times when nature has so much of an...
Published 05/24/08
Whether they are seen as acts of God, or as simple climate-related
occurrences, natural events have always had a sizeable impact on military
operations. At the small end of the
scale are the little changes in terrain or weather that may affect a battle or
a small war. For example, many armies
have postponed their campaigns due to inclement weather conditions, and many
militaries have suffered from rampant disease.
On the other end of the scale are the times when nature has so much of
an...
Published 05/03/08
This episode covers the period between Bush's declaration of "Mission
Accomplished" and the change in coalition leadership (from General
Casey to General Petraeus). The following major events and topics are
discussed:
2003: Deaths of Saddam's two sons (Qusay and Uday), capture of
Saddam, Baathist Purge, National Museum looting, and Bremer's
disbanding of the Iraqi Army.2004: Sectarian violence and displacement, Operation Vigiliant
Resolve (1st Fallujah), Battle of Ramadi, Battle of...
Published 04/19/08
According to Lawrence Keeley, "90-95% of known societies engage in
war". Why? What compels homo sapiens to kill each other? Why do we
fight? Part one will describe two hypotheses.
War is Necessary:
Aristotle
says in Nicomachean Ethics that "we fight war so that we may live in
peace". This notion is echoed by many other famous thinkers including
Marx (an advocate of a final proletarian revolution in order to
establish a worker's paradise) and Zoroaster (the first monotheist to
discuss the...
Published 04/07/08
According to Lawrence Keeley, "90-95% of known societies engage in
war". Why? What compels homo sapiens to kill each other? Why do we
fight? Part one will describe two hypotheses.
War is Rational:
Sun
Tzu argued that political struggles would eventually lead to armed
conflict. Clausewitz took this one step further by saying that "war is
a mere continuation of policy by other means". Machiavelli completed
this entire line of thought by saying that war was the most efficient
means of attaining...
Published 03/24/08
Joan of Arc (1412-1431) was a poor peasant girl from
Lorraine. One day, she had a vision in which three saints urged her to
lead the French to victory over the English in the Hundred Years' War.
She traveled to Charles VII's court and was appointed head of the
French Army (headed to relieve the besieged city of Orleans) because
her unlikely presence would inspire hope in the French forces. Upon
arriving in Orleans, Joan launched several counterattacks against the
English and broke the siege...
Published 03/14/08
Frederick the Great, King of Prussia, is considered the best commander
of the European Enlightenment. Despite possessing relatively few
people and resources, he transformed the tiny Prussian state into a
great military power (which arguably wouldn't be brought down until
1945). Strategically, he modernized the Prussian military into a
well-trained, well-disciplined unit. He taught them to fire faster,
march with more precision, and deploy artillery quicker. Tactically,
he employed oblique...
Published 03/02/08
President Abraham Lincoln was assassinated by John Wilkes Booth, a
southern sympathizer and a self-proclaimed modern-day Brutus, on April
14th, 1865 (five days after the end of the Civil War). Booth snuck into
Lincoln's viewing Booth at the Ford's Theater while Lincoln was
watching "Our American Cousin" and shot him in the back of the head.
Booth then jumped down onto the stage and ran out the back door. The
ensuing manhunt eventually caught up with him in the swamps of the
Potomac River. He...
Published 02/18/08
Crassus was the wealthiest man in Rome. Before he joined the First
Triumvirate with Pompey and Caesar, he struggled to make a name for
himself. His big break came with the outbreak of the Third Servile
War, when Spartacus led a slave rebellion throughout the Italian
Peninsula. Spartacus and his men wreaked havoc throughout the region,
defeating several Roman legions. Although his original plan was to
escape to Gaul and head home, Spartacus decided to head south towards
Sicily. However,...
Published 02/09/08
Today's episode's script was written by Andrew Tumath of Aberdeen,
United Kingdom. To submit your own script, please send them to me at
[email protected]
The Anglo-Dutch Wars were a series of the
distinct conflicts waged between England and the United Provinces (modern-day
Netherlands) in the middle years of the 17th-century. Fought for different
reasons, alongside different allies, and with different results, the wars
pitted the two great maritime powers of the period...
Published 01/26/08
This episode is an analysis of the environmental impacts of the current
war in Iraq. There are several major categories, each of which will be
discussed. This episode is meant to be an overview of the
rarely-discussed ecological situation in Iraq, rather than a persuasive
piece towards one viewpoint or another. The entire episode will
revolve around environmental issues--political and strategic issues and
biases will not be included.
Negative Effects:Oil Fires: Saddam lit oil wells on...
Published 01/13/08
John McCain Sr: Admiral, Commander of Fast Carrier Task Force in South Pacific during WWII
John McCain Jr: Admiral, Commander of Pacific Command during Vietnam War
John McCain III: Navy aviator, shot down in Hanoi, tortured as a
prisoner of war for 5.5 years, currently running for Republican
nomination for President of the United States
Other presidential candidates with military experience are:
Chris Dodd: Army ReserveMike Gravel: Lieutenant, Counter-Intelligence Corps (West...
Published 01/01/08
The title of this episode comes from the following George Orwell quote: “Serious
sport has nothing to do with fair play. It is bound up with hatred,
jealousy, boastfulness, disregard for all rules and sadistic pleasure
in witnessing violence: in other words it is war minus the shooting."
This is meant to be a fun episode on the similarities between football, chess, and war. Please take each analogy with a grain of salt.
Football (two armies fighting to reach the opposing camp/end...
Published 12/26/07
This episode is written by Russell Holman of Merrimack, New Hampshire.
If you would like to submit a script to Military History Podcast,
please send me an email at
[email protected]
The mighty American military during WWII would have been nothing
without its surprisingly-important rationing system. Food kept the
United States going, so therefore, it is well worth studying.
Throughout WWII and the years beyond, the US entered/exited several
"eras" of rations:
A RationsB...
Published 12/16/07
Aircraft Carriers are the ultimate tool of modern power projection.
They are symbols of both naval strength and air superiority. This
episode covers their history and their future:
1840s: Balloon Carriers are invented1900s: Seaplane Carriers are invented1910s: Modern aircraft carriers are invented1930s-1940s: WWII (five major carrier battles)
Pearl Harbor: Japan's six carriers surprise the United States NavyCoral Sea: Japan's three carriers engage America's two carriers (both lose one...
Published 12/08/07
After the fall of the Soviet Union, the former Yugoslavian countries
began to divide along ethnic lines. Of the five states (Serbia and
Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Macedonia, and Slovenia),
three of them began waging war:
Serbia (Orthodox Christians) under Slobodan MilosevicBosnia (Muslims) under Alija IzetbegovicCroatia (Roman Catholics) under Franjo Tudjman
Initially, both Croatia and Serbia desired to take land from Bosnia.
However, as the war progressed, Croatia took...
Published 12/02/07
Operation Downfall was the proposed invasion of mainland Japan by
Allied Forces near the end of WWII. It was canceled because the atomic
bombs were dropped and Japan surrendered, thereby removing the need for
a military conquest. It would have been the largest amphibious
invasion in history, and it would have been the first time that a
foreign power had set foot on mainland Japanese soil (in the country's
2500 year history).
Operation Downfall had two parts: Operation Olympic (Nov...
Published 11/24/07
The Peloponnesian War was fought by Athens and Sparta in the late 5th
century BC. It was an epic war between two superpowers, and the
similarities to the Cold War are numerous. Since most people know
about the Cold War, since it was so recent, I will summarize this
episode via comparisons between it and the Peloponnesian War.
This second episode covers the Amphipolis Campaign/Cuban Missile Crisis to the surrender of Athens.
The Participants:
Athens/United States: wealthy,...
Published 11/10/07
The Peloponnesian War was fought by Athens and Sparta in the late 5th
century BC. It was an epic war between two superpowers, and the
similarities to the Cold War are numerous. Since most people know
about the Cold War, since it was so recent, I will summarize this
episode via comparisons between it and the Peloponnesian War.
This first episode covers the beginning through the Amphipolis Campaign/Cuban Missile Crisis.
The Participants:
Athens/United States: wealthy, democratic,...
Published 11/10/07