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    Jan 1, 1991

      PUBLICATION ISSUE

    Jan 1, 1991

    THE WAR DEPARTMENT

    THE ARMY AND ECONOMIC MOBILIZATION
    Elberton Smith
    U.S. Army in World War II
    CMH Pub 1-7, Cloth
    1959, 2006; 749 pages, tables, illustrations, bibliographical note, glossary, index

    Not Available through GPO sales.

    An analysis of the complex tasks associated with Army procurement and economic mobilization featuring the War Department's business relationships from prewar planning and the determination of military requirements to the settlement and liquidation of the wartime procurement effort.

    Published: August 21, 2024
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    U.S. Army Center of Military History

    The U.S. Army Center of Military History (CMH) is a subordinate command of Army University within the Training and Transformation Command (T2COM). CMH forges a single, comprehensive historical enterprise unparalleled in the U.S. armed forces and is responsible for the appropriate use of history throughout the United States Army. Traditionally, this mission has meant recording the official history of the Army in both peace and war, while advising the Army Staff on historical matters. This organization's enduring purpose is clear: to deliver full-spectrum decision support, steward the Army’s institutional memory, and operationalize history for the future force.

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    ABOUT THE PUBLICATION

    The War Department

    The War Department

    The eight volumes comprising The War Department subseries describe the achievements of the United States in becoming the Allied "arsenal of democracy" during the Second World War. These volumes also examine how the process of establishing and attaining truly astronomical war production objectives forever changed the structure of the United States economy. Highlighted are the myriad of problems associated with the allocation of limited resources and the organization and the processes involved in the execution of global war strategy. The volumes reveal the war as a transitional period for the nation, an era when the suspicions and fears of entangling alliances were replaced by an era of international cooperation and integration. This subseries thus traces the story of the hopes and fears, the triumphs and struggles of the Army confronting a world at war, and the monumental changes it undertook to meet that challenge.

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