'With this timely, balanced and illuminating study of the Supreme War Council, Meighen McCrae gives us an excellent opportunity to reconsider both Allied strategy in 1917–18 and the difficulties of fighting a coalition war. Essential reading for students of the First World War, grand strategy and conflict resolution.'
Jonathan Boff - University of Birmingham
‘Meighen McCrae's deeply researched study of the creation, workings and achievements of the Supreme War Council in 1918 illuminates the key factors that bound together the Entente Allies, allowing them to prevail. Using American, British and French sources, she gives a more comprehensive picture of the war's global nature than that offered by many historians. This fine work enhances our understanding of how and why the First World War ended in Allied victory.'
Elizabeth Greenhalgh - University of New South Wales, Canberra
‘A very important read for anyone seriously interested in the Great War or in the problems of coalition warfare.’
A. A. Nofi
Source: The NYMAS Review
‘Seeing the war to a final and successful conclusion forced the Allies to think about how to prioritize not just time but space. In this insightful and thought-provoking book, Meighen McCrae analyzes how they did so, giving us new intellectual tools to understand an old problem.’
Michael S. Neiberg
Source: European History Quarterly
‘… Coalition Strategy and the End of the First World War makes a valuable contribution to First World War and international relations literature.’
Alexander Watson
Source: American Historical Review
‘… this work is essential reading for those interested in First World War strategy and policy and the practices of coalition warfare.’
William Philpott
Source: English Historical Review
‘… McCrae takes an innovative and thought-provoking perspective upon the issue of British strategy-making in the conflict.’
David Morgan-Owen
Source: The Journal of Strategic Studies
‘… McCrae … takes her doctorate forward into an important and detailed study of the development of coalition strategy in 1918-19 and notably in terms of the workings of the Supreme War Council …’
Jeremy Black
Source: History Australia
‘… a very important read for anyone seriously interested in the Great War and its consequences or in the problems of coalition warfare.’
A. A. Nofi
Source: The NYMAS Review