The Machines That Changed the Battlefield by Etienne Psaila

The Machines That Changed the Battlefield

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Description

From the mud of the Western Front to the sensor-saturated battlefields of the twenty-first century, the tank has never been a static invention. It has been a moving argument—between firepower and protection, speed and sustainment, concealment and information—tested in wars that punished every assumption and rewarded only what worked under fire.

This book traces the tank’s transformation from a trench-breaking experiment into a modern combined-arms centerpiece shaped by engines, metallurgy, radios, optics, stabilization, and the relentless contest between anti-armor weapons and survivability. Along the way, it follows how doctrine evolved from improvised cooperation to operational art, and why logistics, recovery, and training proved as decisive as gun caliber or armor thickness.

With clear explanations of the technology that mattered and the battlefield realities that shaped it, the narrative connects Cambrai to Kursk, the desert to the city, and Cold War planning to the drone age. The result is a fact-driven history of how armored warfare learned to move, fight, and endure—and why the tank, properly employed, remains a defining instrument of modern ground combat.

This is an independently produced book and is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by any government, military organization, defense contractor, or publisher.

Trademark disclaimer: All trademarks, service marks, and registered trademarks are the property of their respective owners. Any use of such names in this book is for identification and reference purposes only and does not imply any association with or endorsement by the trademark holders.

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