Canada's Mechanized Infantry

The Evolution of a Combat Arm, 1920–2012

By Peter Kasurak
Categories: Canadian History, Military History
Series: Studies in Canadian Military History
Publisher: UBC Press
Hardcover : 9780774862721, 264 pages, February 2020
Paperback : 9780774862738, 264 pages, August 2020
Ebook (PDF) : 9780774862745, 264 pages, February 2020
Ebook (EPUB) : 9780774862752, 264 pages, February 2020
Ebook (MobiPocket) : 9780774862769, 264 pages, February 2020

Table of contents

Introduction

Part 1: Second World War

1 Pre-War Theorizing

2 Learning from Experience

Part 2: Post–Second World War

3 The Concept of a Mechanized Force

4 The Bobcat

5 Implementing the Mechanized Force

Part 3: Cold War Era and Beyond

6 The Imagined War

7 Lightweight? Mediumweight? Heavyweight?

Conclusion

Appendix; Note on Sources; Notes; Bibliography; Index

Description

Canada’s Mechanized Infantry explores the development of the Canadian Army’s infantry after the First World War. Modern studies of technology and war have tended to focus on tanks and armour, but soldiers discovered that military success really depends on the combination of infantry, armour, and artillery. Peter Kasurak demonstrates how the Canadian army implemented successful infantry vehicles and doctrine to further its military goals during the Second World War until organizational constraints took hold in the postwar period. This book reveals the challenges of transforming the infantry into a twenty-first-century combat force by integrating soldiers, vehicles, weapons, and electronics.