Maneuver warfare, or manoeuvre warfare, is a military strategy which seeks to shatter the enemy's overallcohesion and will to fight.
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Maneuver warfare, or manoeuvre warfare, is a military strategy which seeks to shatter the enemy's overallcohesion and will to fight.
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Historically, maneuver warfare was stressed by small militaries, the more cohesive, better trained, or more technologically advanced than attrition warfare counterparts.
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View on attrition Maneuver warfare involves moving masses of men and materiel against enemy strongpoints, with the emphasis on the destruction of the enemy's physical assets, success as measured by enemy combatants killed, equipment and infrastructure destroyed, and territory taken or occupied.
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Attrition Maneuver warfare tends to use rigidly-centralized command structures that require little or no creativity or initiative from lower-level leadership.
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Conventional warfare doctrine identifies a spectrum with attrition warfare and maneuver warfare on opposite ends.
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Maneuver warfare suggest that strategic movement can bring the defeat of an opposing force more efficiently than simply contacting and destroying enemy forces until they can no longer fight.
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Mongol emperor Genghis Khan used a military system of maneuver warfare that focused on rapid, decisive maneuver, utilizing the skill and endurance of his Mongol horsemen.
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An example of his usage of maneuver warfare was the defeat and annexation of the Khwarazmian Empire between 1219 to 1221 CE, which wielded an army nearly three times the Mongol army, in just a few months of fighting.
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Maneuver warfare cited Henri de La Tour d'Auvergne, Viscount of Turenne as one major source of his strategy.
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Maneuver warfare trained a normal, if rather undisciplined, French Army of Italy into moving faster than most thought possible.
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Key requirement for success in maneuver warfare is up-to-date accurate intelligence on the disposition of key enemy command, support, and combat units.
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