Scribner Seminar Program
Course Description
                              Warfare Today
Instructor(s): Steve Hoffmann, Government
What can thinking people in the United States learn about the latest war from studying
                                 past wars ? Today’s war seems to go well or badly, mostly depending upon the political
                                 slant of the news media we prefer to use. In this seminar, we study American military
                                 methods employed during the present war in Iraq, an how many of them first appeared
                                 during World War II. We see how they proved themselves, or failed to do so, in wars
                                 fought in Vietnam, Somalia, and Iraq, and became linked to further military innovation.
                                 Application of thinking drawn from political science enables us to draw powerful lessons
                                 from military history. Those lessons do not ignore the drama, triumph, tragedy, horror,
                                 humanity, and even humor, found in good writing by military historians. Students discuss
                                 and learn to write insightfully on such military matters as: should the war in Iraq
                                 be fought by small numbers of American soliders or by the much larger numbers of the
                                 World War II days ? Can innovative American high technology overcome the low-tech
                                 innovation achieved by the opposing side? How do our own political wishes shape our
                                 own understanding of a particular war, and what happens to it ?