02074 a2200229 4500003000500000005001700005010001600022020001700038040000900055082001100064100001900075245017800094260004700272300003500319440004800354505124700402538003001649650003201679942001201711999001901723952010201742Nust20170207153409.0 a 76051924 a0837194792 : cNust00a355.021 aCoox, Alvin D.14aThe anatomy of a small war :bthe Soviet-Japanese struggle for Changkufeng-Khasan, 1938 /cby Alvin D. Coox ; foreword by Edwin O. Reischauer ; cartography by Dana Lombardy. aWestport, Conn. :bGreenwood Press,c1977. axxvi, 409 p. :bill. ;c22 cm. 0aContributions in military history ;vno. 13 aThe Setting (APge-3) Early Rumblings (Page-11) The Tokyo Command Level (apge-21) Reconnaissance in Force (page-25) First Involvement of the 19th Division (page-35) The High Command Consultants (page-47) The Failure to Win Imperial Sanction (Page-57) The Effort to De – Escalate (page-71) Shachofeng : Japanese Curse or Boon? (page-83) Crossing The Tumen (page-95) Mouting The Assault Against Changkufeng (page-128) The Night Attack (Page-138) The Anchor Heights (Apge-156) Postmortem : Cost , Claim and Critiques (Page-167) fait Accompli and Problems of Rapport (page-173) Russian Retaliation (page-187) Intensification of the Ground War (Page-199)Reorganization , frustration and Restraints (page-217) The Second Soviet Offensive (Page-229) Crisis on the Crest (Page-238) Continuation of the Soviet Offensive (page-249) Developments of 8-9 August (page-364) Attritions Toll (page-278) Escalation or Break off (page-287)The Role of Diplomacy (page-297) Achievement of a Cease – Fire (apge-306) Stilling the Guns (page-319) Implementation and Pull-Back (page-332) Military Wind –up and unfinished Business(page-348) Lessons (page-355) Question of Causation and Cartography (page-362) Changkufeng in The Context of Limited War (page-370)  aAlmirah No.52, Shelf No.5 0aChangkufeng Incident, 1938. 2ddccBK c185297d185297 00102ddc40708NFICaMCSbMCSd2016-12-12l0o355.02 COOpMCS21632r2016-12-08w2016-12-12yBK