On War
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In On War, Carl von Clausewitz gives us a comprehensive masterwork in three volumes that purports to be one of literature’s most significant attempts to understand war in the sense of its internal dynamics as well as a form of government policy. In doing so he also outlines many of the character qualities which he feels a master leader encompasses. Knowledge is one of these qualities. However, as von Clausewitz (146) argues, at different levels of command different levels of knowledge are required because a good cavalry commander might make a poor commander-in-chief and vice-versa “Ideas will differ in accordance with the commander’s area of responsibility. In the lower ranks they will be focused upon minor and more limited objectives, in the more senior, upon wider and more comprehensive ones.”A commander-in-chief needs a certain kind of knowledge, however. He does not have to know how to harness a battery horse or be an astute observer of mankind, but he does have to know the ins and outs of the higher affairs of state and its detailed policies. He also needs to know the logistics and timeline involved in moving a battalion of troops across a specific distance under specific circumstances. In the acquiring of this king of knowledge he is like a bee in nature, one that possesses a special ability “The knowledge needed by a senior commander is distinguished by the fact that it can only be attained by a special talent, through the medium
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Approximate Word count = 1011
Approximate Pages = 4 (250 words per page)
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