Macedonian supply train crossing ancient terrain

The Invisible Army - Part 1: Alexander's Invisible Army

The Invisible Army ← Series Home Key Takeaways Logistics as strategy: Alexander's campaigns succeeded because he planned supply before battle—timing sieges to coincide with harvests, selecting routes based on water sources, not just enemy positions. Light and fast beats heavy and slow: By minimizing baggage trains and maximizing soldier self-sufficiency, Alexander achieved speeds of advance that wouldn't be matched until motorized warfare. The tyranny of the horse: Cavalry horses consume 10x more fodder than a soldier eats grain—Alexander's army ate its way across Asia, and understanding this constraint explains his route choices. Logistics determines limits: Even Alexander couldn't sustain a campaign beyond the limits of supply. His army mutinied at the Hyphasis River not from cowardice but from exhaustion—they had reached the edge of what logistics could support. The Conquest That Shouldn’t Have Worked In 334 BCE, Alexander III of Macedon crossed the Hellespont into Asia with approximately 48,000 infantry, 6,000 cavalry, and enough supplies for… about thirty days. ...

Macedonian supply train crossing ancient terrain

The Kinetic Chain - Part 1: Alexander's Invisible Army

The Kinetic Chain 1 Part 1: Alexander's Invisible Army 2 Part 2: Napoleon's Fatal Calculation 3 Part 3: The Railroad Revolution 4 Part 4: The Crimean Catastrophe 5 Part 5: Barbarossa and the Battle of the Gauges 6 Part 6: The Battle of the Bulge and the Tyranny of Fuel 7 Part 7: Wholesale Distribution and the American Way of 8 Part 8: The Pacific Logistics Challenge 9 Part 9: Victory Through Logistics 10 Part 10: Vietnam and the Tyranny of Terrain 11 Part 11: Giap's Bicycle Brigades 12 Part 12: The Ho Chi Minh Trail 13 Part 13: American Largesse in Vietnam 14 Part 14: The M16 Debacle and Logistics Failure 15 Part 15: The Falklands Logistics Miracle 16 Part 16: Desert Storm and the Logistics Miracle 17 Part 17: The Future of Contested Logistics ← Series Home Key Takeaways Logistics as strategy: Alexander's campaigns succeeded because he planned supply before battle—timing sieges to coincide with harvests, selecting routes based on water sources, not just enemy positions. Light and fast beats heavy and slow: By minimizing baggage trains and maximizing soldier self-sufficiency, Alexander achieved speeds of advance that wouldn't be matched until motorized warfare. The tyranny of the horse: Cavalry horses consume 10x more fodder than a soldier eats grain—Alexander's army ate its way across Asia, and understanding this constraint explains his route choices. Logistics determines limits: Even Alexander couldn't sustain a campaign beyond the limits of supply. His army mutinied at the Hyphasis River not from cowardice but from exhaustion—they had reached the edge of what logistics could support. The Conquest That Shouldn’t Have Worked In 334 BCE, Alexander III of Macedon crossed the Hellespont into Asia with approximately 48,000 infantry, 6,000 cavalry, and enough supplies for… about thirty days. ...