What is a good book on the different tactics used during and around WW2?
It's the first time armies became really mobile, it was the death of static line warfare.
WW2 is the 'birth' of modern war as we know it, aswell as full combined arms (army, navy, air force). In WW1 planes were still experimental but in WW2 planes were a huge fucking deal and very important.
>>2030768
That's a pretty long title for a book.
>>2030768
Just to be picky I'd say that combined arms is infantry, armour and air instead of naval.
>>2030756
At what level?
This focuses on British and German tactics in the bocages of Normandy and explains down to to squad level.
https://mega.nz/#!sQRwhBzb!1mV_atzmWnkS-YLJLq9LazAktPEdiOVf1YpTvNOkbW4
>>2030826
All of it, basically.
>>2030833
Probably easiest to find Osprey books.
Find em;
https://ospreypublishing.com/blog/osprey-tactics---the-series-that-wasn-t---/
Download em;
http://gen.lib.rus.ec/search.php?req=World+War+II+Infantry+Tactics%3A+Company+and+Battalion&open=0&res=25&view=simple&phrase=1&column=def
>>2030863
Nah, I can basically get any book you name.
>>2030756
>it was the death of static line warfare
Arguably this happened at the end of WW1 when Germans got rid of their static trench system in the west and invented the defence-in-depth doctrine.
>>2030930
And French invented a proto operational art.
The sword behind the shield
>>2030768
>death of static line warfare.
the death of static line warfare came somewhere halfway through the 19th century
>>2030793
kek