Focusing on a largely overlooked First World War battlefront, this account reveals the intense and brutal battles of Isonzo along the Italy-Austro-Hungarian border. With over 1.75 million casualties, it challenges the notion that the Italian and Austrian armies were ineffective. Schindler argues that the Habsburg Empire's defeat stemmed from military and economic failures, rather than political or ethnic issues, aiming to restore the significance of these sacrifices in 20th century European history.
John R. Schindler Livres



Fall of the Double Eagle
- 360pages
- 13 heures de lecture
Examination of the battle for Galicia (23 August - 11 September 1914), the most historically and strategically consequential of the Great War's three opening campaigns
The first full account of the role the Bosnian conflict--and American policy--played in the transformation of al-Qu’ida from a local terror into a global threat.