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Reviews for How to Build Practical Firearm Suppressors

 How to Build Practical Firearm Suppressors magazine reviews

The average rating for How to Build Practical Firearm Suppressors based on 2 reviews is 4 stars.has a rating of 4 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2013-12-11 00:00:00
2006was given a rating of 3 stars Ken Lau
Shimko assesses the possibility of an ongoing Revolution in Military Affairs (RMA) regarding the way the US wages modern war. The author looks back at American warfare, with a cursory review of Vietnam and the First Gulf War, and considers the many modern factors that have might have fundamentally affected the character of war. The author gives fair consideration to the potential of an ongoing information, precision, and/or air power revolution, but adequately demonstrates that none of these dynamics have necessarily changed the way the US wages war. They may have made the US more informed, more precise, and able to reach further into enemy territory from a standoff range, but they haven't really changed the character of how the US strategizes or prosecutes war. He also discusses how the US tends to hypothesize adversaries in order to develop military strategy. This is a profound subject that deserves further research. Shimko does appear to hope for an RMA that can adapt the US to be more effective at counterinsurgency, but I don't think he digs deep enough into the challenges a democracy faces with regard to long-term wars. Additionally, while he discusses the weaknesses in fungibility of military assets, he disregards the role of political capital in war. This book provides an informative overview of many of the recent innovations that have been included in warfare, and it provides a reasonable assessment on the question of an ongoing RMA. I was not convinced by the author's recommendations - I believe a significant culture change requires some compelling need to change, and in a democracy, that usually requires public will. With the downshift of involvement in Iraq and Afghanistan, I don't see that happening, short of a national crisis.
Review # 2 was written on 2014-12-18 00:00:00
2006was given a rating of 5 stars Brian Hicklin
A very good overview of and balance perspective on the RMA debate, and how the Iraq wars served as a catalyst for that debate. For the most of the people that know that they're supposed to dislike the RMA (and EBO, RDO, NCW, etc) this is great place to start so that you can answer the question why with more than a parochial answer. Also, the debate on future war has a very interesting framework by characterizing future threats by their significance versus likelihood. The author makes a great argument for how the DoD can actually chew gum and walk at the same time, even if the divergence "faith" to borrow from Kuhn's "Revolutions" is quite drastic.


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