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How America Saved the World

The Untold Story of U.S. Preparedness Between the World Wars

How America Saved the World
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Author:

Eric Hammel

Format: Hardcover, 400 Pages
Item: 145798
ISBN: 9780760335116
Publisher: Zenith Press
Specs
Illustrations: 32 b/w photos
Size: 6 x 9
Weight: 1.688 lb.
Edition: First
Published: April 13th 2009
DC: AP
List Price: $30.00 $22.50
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In 1932, less than fifteen years after proving itself a world power in the Great War, the United States could muster its entire active duty army in Chicago’s Soldier Field with room to spare.  And yet, within months of the December 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor, the United States had once again emerged as the mightiest--and best armed--fighting force in the world.  However remarkable it seems, this unprecedented turnaround was not the miracle many have declared it to be.  In this book acclaimed military historian Eric Hammel uncovers the facts behind this powerful re-awakening to finally give a full account of how America so suddenly and “miraculously” became World War II’s “Arsenal of Democracy.”

 

The story begins with decline of the American military after World War I.  Hammel then turns his focus to a pivotal “aircraft meeting” of November 1938.  Here we see how the decision to put the nation’s prodigious resources into rearming was in fact made well before Pearl Harbor.  How America Saved the World documents the workings of the remarkable alliance of government, industry, and military community behind the United State’s orderly transformation into an invincible military power.  The result is the first detailed picture of a vast human endeavor, conceived and overseen by the best minds in the nation--an accomplishment unparalleled in the conduct of war.

Eric Hammel is a critically acclaimed military historian and author of nearly forty narrative and pictorial histories, including Chosin: Heroic Ordeal of the Korean War, Marines in Hue City, and The Root: The Marines in Beirut. He has written many titles on U.S. Marine operations in World War II, such as Pacific Warriors, Iwo Jima, and his U.S. Marines in World War II series—Guadalcanal; New Georgia, Bougainville, and Cape Gloucester; and Tarawa and the Marshalls.

         

Bookviews, May 2009“How America Saved the World by Eric Hammel tells how preparation for war was the reason that, following the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941, the nation was able to transition quickly to an offensive war. This excellent book tells why America was able to transform itself into what FDR called “the arsenal of democracy,” fielding armies in both the Asian and European theatres, while providing them with countless tanks and ships and guns. America may have been a sleeping giant when it came to the political events unfolding, but the decision to turn the entire force of American industry toward the task of winning World War II had been made long before the initial attack on the homeland. It had, in fact, begun in 1938 as the war clouds threatened. Those who criticize America’s current superpower status would do well to read this book and then wonder if preparing for war isn’t the best way to maintain the peace.”
Book News, May 2009“Hammel, a noted military historian and author, analyzes the military build-up in the United States just prior to World War II and notes how this strategy was "deliberate, orderly and integrated." Written for history buffs and general readers, this volume characterizes the US as a "sleeping giant" after the end of World War I as a new shift toward an expanded military-industrial complex was implemented, creating an "Arsenal of Democracy" that would ultimately decide the outcome of World War II. Appendices include a list of the armies, corps, regiments and divisions in the Army and Navy as well as a list of major naval and aircraft hardware.”
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