Ep 26: Andrew Lambert on the Crimean War Andrew Lambert, Laughton Professor of Naval History in the Department of War Studies, King's College, joins the show to discuss the Crimean War, including why it shouldn’t have been called by that name. Professor Lambert also explains the relevance of the Crimean War to today’s war in Ukraine.Times • 01:28 Introduction• 02:20 Causes of the Crimean War• 07:57 Flashpoint in the Holy Land• 12:31 Steamships and Strategy• 16:34 Functional Dysfunction in Policymaking• 21:44 Why Target Sevastopol?• 26:44 What Went Wrong• 31:47 The Press and Public Opinion• 36:31 Reading Events Incorrectly • 38:57 The Baltic Campaign• 45:30 Mahan and Corbett Interpret the War• 48:39 Ukraine War - An Echo of the Crimean War• 55:34 Can Russia Re-Integrate Into The Global Community? • 58:32 Will Putin Use Tactical Nuclear Weapons?
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This podcast seeks to learn what war teaches. There has been a steady decline in the study of military history and its associated theoretical discipline, strategy.This podcast seeks to fill that gap through in-depth interviews on military and diplomatic history. Our guests have included former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, the Cold War historian John Lewis Gaddis, and former China Select Committee chairman Mike Gallagher. We discuss the battlefield commanders, diplomats, strategists, policymakers, and statesmen who have had to make wartime decisions in the ancient and modern eras. The subject of an episode may be an historical battle, campaign, o...