• 138 - Guadalcanal - Battle of the Tenaru: How the Marines stopped Ichiki's night assault on the Alligator Creek
    Oct 9 2025

    This is the fourth episode of our Guadalcanal series with historian and author Dave Holland.

    This episodes discusses:

    How did the Marines employ the 37 mm gun firing canister at Alligator Creek?
    Why did Colonel Ichiki attack without heavy weapons— trading firepower for speed and what was the cost?
    What are the myths about scout Jacob Vouza?
    How did barbed wire obstacles and coconut-log bunkers employed for to create an engagement zone?
    How did pre-registered fires shape the Battle of Tenaru?
    What early warnings did coastwatchers and patrols provide before the assault?
    How did Marine tanks at dawn finish the fight across the sandbar?
    What role did the Cactus Air Force play in the Battle of Tenaru?
    Was Ichiki killed in action or by seppuku—what’s the best evidence?
    What operational lessons from Tenaru guided both sides at Henderson Field?

    Dave is an ex-Marine and was posted to Guadalcananal with the Australian Federal Police. He regularly leads battlefield study tours through the area. He is a world-leading expert on the battles of Guadalcanal and author of Guadalcanal's Longest Fight - The Pivotal Battles of the Matanikau Front.

    Check out the show notes for this episode.

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    59 mins
  • 137 - The Marines' Assault on Guadalcanal
    Sep 23 2025

    This is the third episode of our Guadalcanal series with historian and author Dave Holland.

    This episodes discusses:

    How the Marines seized conducted the landing and seized Guadalcanal’s decisive terrain.
    Red Beach landing bypasses IJA fortifications at Lunga Point.
    Vandegrift prioritizes tight perimeter, airfield defense.
    Carriers withdraw; logistics halved, myths debunked.
    Japanese forces surprised and how they reacted.
    Combined arms landings: infantry, artillery, engineers.
    What really happened with the Goettge Patrol?
    Logistics speed amphibious resupply.
    Amtracs and beachmasters enable rapid combat buildup.
    Modern littoral operations: enduring risk management lessons.

    Dave is an ex-Marine and was posted to Guadalcananal with the Australian Federal Police. He regularly leads battlefield study tours through the area. He is a world-leading expert on the battles of Guadalcanal and author of Guadalcanal's Longest Fight - The Pivotal Battles of the Matanikau Front.

    Check out the show notes for this episode.

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    47 mins
  • 136 - Marines vs Japanese: Brutal Battles for Tulagi, Gavutu and Tanambogo
    Sep 15 2025

    This is the second episode of our Guadalcanal series with historian and author Dave Holland.

    Shoestring invasion planning
    Koro rehearsals fiasco
    Risking the aircraft carriers vs time to unload the convoy
    Crutchley’s covering cruisers
    Rupertus leads Tulagi
    Blue Beach landing
    Fighting at “the Cut”
    Improvised cave tactics
    Gavutu–Tanambogo battles
    Tanks combat

    Dave is an ex-Marine and was posted to Guadalcananal with the Australian Federal Police. He regularly leads battlefield study tours through the area. He is a world-leading expert on the battles of Guadalcanal and author of Guadalcanal's Longest Fight - The Pivotal Battles of the Matanikau Front.

    Check out the show notes for this episode.

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    50 mins
  • 135 - How the Marines Prepared for Guadalcanal | Operation Watchtower Explained
    Aug 31 2025

    This is the first in a major series of podcasts looking at the Battles of Guadalcanal. This is an interview with Dave Holland.

    This episode looks at:

    Guadalcanal's strategic significance
    Terrain and Climate of Guadalcanal
    Development of Marine Amphibious Doctrine
    Combat experience within the 1st Marine Division
    Strength and structure of a Marine Division
    US intelligence preparation before the landings
    Japanese intelligence and intentions
    US decision to land on Guadalcanal and Tulagi
    Operation Shoestring

    Dave is an ex-Marine and was posted to Guadalcananal with the Australian Federal Police. He regularly leads battlefield study tours through the area. He is a world-leading expert on the battles of Guadalcanal and author of Guadalcanal's Longest Fight - The Pivotal Battles of the Matanikau Front.

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    44 mins
  • 134 - Preparing Today's Armies for Tomorrow's Wars: Battlefield Innovation and Disruption
    Aug 7 2025

    This is the final episode of three in our series from our interview with Retired Colonel John Antal discussing his research into contemporary combat and how technology is changing the modern battlefield.

    John makes a series of great points during the interview:

    Modern War Is Fought in a Transparent Battlespace
    Visibility through drones, sensors, and AI means traditional massing of forces is now lethal. You must deceive and disrupt enemy sensors or be destroyed.

    Masking Should Be a Principle of War
    Masking = multi-domain deception to confuse enemy ISR. Use decoys, optical/thermal camouflage, and emission control—make the enemy see what you want them to see.

    Camouflage and Concealment Are Critically Neglected
    Western armies (incl. U.S. and Australian) have virtually no meaningful camouflage training. Without drones for perspective or thermal checks, soldiers can't learn what the enemy sees.

    Command Posts Are Death Traps
    Tents and Winnebago-style mobile HQs are vulnerable to drone and artillery strikes. Forces must restructure command posts: smaller, distributed, better masked, and mobile.

    Infiltration Is the Primary Tactic of Modern War
    Seen in Nagorno-Karabakh, Ukraine, and Gaza, infiltration bypasses strongpoints and succeeds in high-transparency environments where massing is suicidal.

    Mobile Phones Kill Units
    Civilian phones constantly emit signals. Unless militaries ban personal devices or deploy secure comms, they invite precision targeting.

    Drones Are the Machine Guns of the 21st Century
    Drones must be ubiquitous, especially at the squad level. But to manage this, armies need a dedicated drone corps—trained, maintained, and operationalised like any combat arm.

    Resilience Beats Exquisite Systems
    Over-reliance on billion-dollar platforms (e.g., B-2s, F-35s) is a strategic risk. Operation Spiderweb Cheap drones can destroy exquisite systems. Forces must be able to take hits and continue fighting.

    Training Is Outdated and Unrealistic
    Many exercises simulate conventional war (e.g., Desert Storm) rather than dispersed, dark, denied environments. We fall to the level of our training—not rise to our expectations.

    Leaders Must Prepare for First Strike and Distributed Ops
    The enemy will hit first. Western forces must train to disperse, operate without emissions, reassemble fast, and strike with real-time decision-making. The key: agility, initiative, and survivability.

    Check out the show notes for all of the information that we cover in this episode as well as the images and other details that didn't make it into the podcast.

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    39 mins
  • 133 - Kill webs and super swarms - building survivable CPs for decision superiority
    Jul 28 2025

    This is the second episode of our interview with Retired Colonel John Antal discussing his research into contemporary combat and how technology is changing the modern battlefield.

    We discuss the lessons learnt from 2nd Nagorno-Karabakh, Ukraine and recent Israeli battles and how technology is changing the modern battlefield.

    Check out the show notes for all of the information that we cover in this episode as well as the images and other details that didn't make it into the podcast.

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    31 mins
  • 132 - Ten Battlefield Disruptors for Tomorrow's Wars
    Jul 13 2025

    How is the modern battlefield changing?

    What role is technology like Artificial Intelligence, drones, precision strike and electronic warfare changing command and control, ISR and combined arms?

    This is the first of 3 episodes with retired Colonel John Antal, who has studied 2nd Nagorno-Karabakh, recent Israeli battles and the war in Ukraine.

    Check out the show notes for all of the information that we cover in this episode as well as the images and other details that didn't make it into the podcast.

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    35 mins
  • 131 - Amphibious Ambitions and Island Defeats - How Kinman and Hainan shaped China's Navy
    Jun 14 2025

    This is the second of a two-part series looking at the origin story of the PLA Navy. This episode looks at the crucial Kinmen and Hainan Islands campaigns. This is an interview with Dr Toshi Yoshihara, an expert in the history of China's Navy.

    How was each campaign planned and executed?
    What were the results for the Chinese Navy?
    What did the PLA Navy learn from these campaigns?
    How have these early littoral manoeuvre campaigns shaped the PLA today?

    We discuss the roles of Mao Zedong, Lin Biao, Xiao Jinguang, in these early important battles for China.

    Check out the show notes for all of the information that we cover in this episode as well as the images and other details that didn't make it into the podcast.

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    39 mins