This book is intended to be the first in a short series looking at the
major developments of battle tanks by the western nations in the period
from the end of the Second World War to the present.
During WW2 the tank came of age, and was probably the predominant land
weapon of the period. However the tank was never perfected during the
war, and the post-war decades have seen enormous resources expended on
trying to do just that - to make the tank perfect. This of course is an
impossible task, as threats evolve and mutate, and trying to design a
vehicle (or indeed any weapon of war) to do a multitude of different
tasks will inevitably lead to compromise.
Notwithstanding this, the development of the modern 'Chariots of Fire'
in the 1950s was an utterly fascinating process, with ten or more
project and trial tank designs rejected for every design actually
adopted. It was truly an era when technology was evolving rapidly, for
if the specifications of the late 1940s differed little from the most
powerful wartime designs; by 1960 the specifications for new battle
tanks reflected every tactical implication of NATO's nuclear strategy.