Rave Reviews for Casemate’s Kleinkrieg

We are so proud to share the warm regards and excellent book reviews we have received for Casemate’s new book, Kleinkrieg: The German Experience with Guerrilla Wars, from Clausewitz to Hitler  by Charles D. Melson which was published earlier this month.

Charles D. Melson was the Chief Historian for the U.S. Marine Corps, at the Marine Corps University at Quantico, Virginia.  Chuck also served as a joint historian with the U.S. Central Command and U.S. Special Operations Command.  He was the author, co-author, or editor of official publications and series.  He was the recipient of the General Edwin Simmons-Henry Shaw Award for public historians and the General Leonard Chapman Medal.  His education includes degrees in Liberal Arts from St. John’s College, Annapolis, Maryland and in History and Fine Arts from Sonoma State University, Rohnert Park, California.  Chuck is married to Janet Ann Pope with two children, David and Katherine.  He lives on Kent Island in Maryland.

His book, Kleinkrieg discusses how in recent years the great powers of the West—primarily the US and UK—have most often been relegated to fighting “small wars,” rather than the great confrontational battles for which they once prepared. It has been a difficult process, with some conflicts increasingly being seen as unwinnable, or at least not worth the effort in treasure and blood, even as the geopolitical structure of the world appears to slip. It is thus worth paying heed now, to the experiences of another power which once encountered the same problems.

This work examines the German analysis to the problem, covering their experiences from the Napoleonic era to the Third Reich. Though the latter regime, the most despicable in history, needed to be destroyed by US/UK conventional force, as well as that of the Soviets, the German military meantime provided analysis to the question of grassroots—as opposed to great-power—warfare.

This work is built around the historical analysis titled Kleinkrieg, provided to the German High Command by Arthur Earhardt in 1935 (republished in 1942 and 1943) which examined insurgencies from French-occupied Spain to recurrent problems in the Balkans. It also calls upon the Bandenbekampfung (Fighting the Guerilla Bands) document provided to Germany’s OKW in 1944. In both, conditions that were specific to broader military operations were separated from circumstances in occupation campaigns, and new background in the German experience in suppressing rebellion in World War II is presented.

Edited and annotated, along with new analysis, by Charles D. Melson, former Chief Historian for the U.S. Marine Corps, Kleinkrieg expands our knowledge of the Western experience in coping with insurgencies. Without partaking in ideological biases, this work examines the purely military problem as seen by professionals. While small wars are not new, how they should be fought by a modern industrial nation is still a question to be answered. Rediscovered and presented in English, these German thoughts on the issue are now made available to a new generation of guerilla and irregular war fighters in the West.

Walter Laquer the author of The Guerilla Reader wrote,

“Arthur Ehrhardt was almost the only German author in the interwar period to concern himself with the prospects of guerilla warfare in modern conditions.”

Stephen G. Fritz, PhD author of Ostkrieg: Hitler’s War of Extermination in the East wrote,

“The German attitude to guerilla war was far more complex than stereotypical brutality for the sake of brutality.”

Col Douglas E. Nash, USA, Ret U.S. Marine Corps History Division, author of Victory Was Beyond Their Grasp, and Hell’s Gate calls Arthur Ehrhardt:

“…one of the least known but among the most influential counterinsurgency theorists of the Twentieth Century. Despite being transferred to Himmler’s fanatical SS in 1944, Ehrhardt continued to be an out-of-the box thinker on revolutionary warfare, focused more on devising practical solutions against it rather than relying on rigid ideological formula.”

Col Wray R. Johnson, USAF, Ret, PhD U.S. Marine Corps School of Advanced Warfighting, and author of Airpower in Small Wars wrote,

“The acclaimed military historian John Keegan wrote, ‘Continuities, particularly hidden continuities, form the principle subject of historical inquiry.’ It is the ‘identification of links’ between the past and present that ‘enable us to comprehend our actions in context.’ In that regard, one can find Mao Tse-tung’s operational art in the Old Testament and Arthur Ehrhardt’s treatise demonstrates that the nature of ‘small wars’ has remained constant since Clausewitz taught the subject at the Kriegsakademie. We are therefore indebted to Chuck Melson for reminding of us this fact.”

Bruce I. Gudmundsson, PhD U.S. Marine Corps University, author of On Artillery, On Armor, and Storm Troop Tactics wrote that, 

“Kleinkrieg is a highly accessible introduction to an important, but frequently neglected, aspect of German military history as well for those interested in guerilla warfare.”

Kleinkrieg: The German Experience with Guerilla Wars, from Clausewitz to Hitler       Hardback       ISBN : 9781612003566    $32.95

Copies are available for purchase on here on our website or from any major book retailer.


Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s