The Voices of War

84. Amos Fox - Beyond the illusion of manoeuvre: Navigating the clash between intentions and reality in modern warfare

Feb 27, 2023
Amos Fox, a US Army officer with 24+ years and prolific writer on land and proxy warfare, discusses tensions between military intentions and battlefield reality. He critiques Western faith in manoeuvre, highlights overlooked sieges and urban combat, examines the Precision Paradox, and frames Ukraine as a test case for realist, pragmatic doctrine reform.
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ANECDOTE

From ROTC To Long Career After Iraq Deployment

  • Amos Fox joined the Indiana National Guard in 1999 to pay for college and then commissioned via ROTC, intending a short service before football coaching.
  • He deployed to Iraq in 2005, enjoyed soldiering, extended his career, and will retire to pursue academia and a PhD.
ANECDOTE

Iraq Deployment Forced Vehicles And Posture Changes

  • Amos describes arriving to Fort Hood and deploying to the Abu Ghraib region where the Samarra mosque bombing escalated daily contacts and heavy insurgent attacks.
  • He recounts transitioning from Bradleys to Humvees to present a less combative posture and reduce collateral infrastructure damage.
INSIGHT

Maneuver Has Become An Empty Catchall

  • Maneuver has been elevated into an all-encompassing doctrine term but often means little because fire, movement, and advantage exist in every fight.
  • Amos warns Western militaries rely on a single lexicon, causing chaos when real situations (e.g., sieges) don't fit the model.
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