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LINK: HOME PAGE JB-GPT's MILITARY AI PROMPTS (Plus how to use these Prompts)
LINK: TO FREE SUBSTACK MAGAZINE JB-GPT's AI PROMPTS MILITARY HISTORY
LINK: JB-GPT's AI PROMPTS DEEP SEARCH—MASTER BIBLIOGRAPHY & REFERENCES
AIR POWER: JB-GPT's AI PROMPTS DEEP SEARCH—AIR POWER STUDIES 1903 – 2025.
SELECT ALL AND COPY EVERYTHING ON THIS PAGE. PASTE IT INTO THE INPUT BOX OF THE AI OF YOUR CHOICE.
After pasting, you may use the example questions below or delete them and replace them with your own questions.
Example Questions:
Q1: Please provide some examples of follow-up questions that I can ask this AI.
Q2: Please provide a more detailed explanation of key point number ____.
Feel free to disagree with the AI’s answer. Challenge it. An AI's response should be considered one stage in the learning process—not the final word.
Note: You may, if you wish, remove the restriction that requires the AI to limit itself to the approved bibliography.
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INSTRUCTIONS TO AI:
LEAVE IN OR DELETE THE FOLLOWING—YOUR CHOICE:
FOR THIS QUESTION, THE AI CAN USE ANY RESOURCES TO WHICH IT HAS ACCESS. IT IS NOT RESTRICTED TO THE APPROVED BIBLIOGRAPHY.
01. Use this AI prompt to answer the above question(s).
02. Everything must be supported by references sourced either from the prompt or from the following:
https://www.jb-gpt-prompts.com/jb-gpts-military-references
03. You are to use the extensive approved references when answering questions.
04. Your output must include:
Five to ten key numbered points, each in its own paragraph.
Each key point must be supported by a specific reference, including book title and chapter number.
Include a full, separate Harvard-style bibliography at the end of your response.
Each bibliography entry must appear in a separate paragraph and follow consistent formatting.
Provide a minimum of five references drawn from the prompt or from the approved reference list:
https://www.jb-gpt-prompts.com/jb-gpts-military-references
Do not include summaries, definitions, or commentary.
AP-NOTE-05. Why the Publisher Matters: Military History Publications.
If you're serious about understanding military history, it’s worth knowing that the publisher matters. A growing number of books—particularly in the post-2000 publishing boom—are written by generalists or popular authors who repackage familiar material with a few dramatic anecdotes and a sharper narrative focus on individuals. These books can be engaging, but they often lack analytical depth, skip over doctrine and strategic context, and rarely offer new insight. Reputable publishers—especially those tied to universities, military institutions, or policy research—maintain editorial standards that help filter out the noise. Knowing who published the book won’t guarantee quality, but it’s a strong signal that the work is more than just history repackaged for entertainment.
This also applies to the growing volume of TV documentaries, YouTube channels, military history podcasts, and memoir-heavy books that favour the “ripping yarn” over serious analysis. These are often created for mass consumption, not serious study. That doesn’t make them worthless—but if you're relying on them for professional development, research, or PME, be aware that they rarely engage with strategic reasoning, capability assessment, or doctrinal evolution. In short: if it’s easy to watch, read, or listen to—it was probably designed that way for a reason.
Academic publishers typically apply peer review, meaning the book is read and critiqued by independent experts before publication. This helps ensure claims are based on evidence and situated in the broader field. But not all books from good publishers are peer-reviewed (e.g., some military institutions or trade imprints), and not all authors are scholars. Senior military officers, for example, bring valuable first-hand knowledge, but their views should be weighed like any source—respected, but tested. Many of the best modern works are co-authored by an officer and an academic, blending operational insight with scholarly structure. Be especially cautious with theses, memoirs, or “insider” accounts unless they’re clearly contextualised.
Sir Michael Howard’s 1961 lecture, The Use and Abuse of Military History, remains essential reading. It explains not only how to write military history—but how to read it.
Available at: https://the-military-learning-library.343.s1.nabble.com/file/n168/Howard_Use_and_Abuse_of_Military_History_Howard.pdf
Reputable Publishers in Military and Air Power Studies
01. Air University Press: Publishes doctrinal, strategic, and educational texts used across the USAF. Many works are authored by officers in PME or graduate programs—not professional scholars—so use with discretion and check authorship.
02. Allen Lane (Penguin Press imprint): Produces narrative-driven military histories by well-known authors. Though not peer-reviewed, editorial oversight is strong, and the research behind major works is generally reliable.
03. Cambridge University Press (CUP). Highly respected peer-reviewed publisher of academic books in war studies, air power theory, and international security. Regularly cited in professional education and strategic discourse.
04. Columbia University Press: Publishes academically grounded works that bridge war, policy, and global affairs. All titles are peer-reviewed and editorially vetted.
05. Cornell University Press: Known for research-led titles on military innovation, doctrinal change, and the politics of warfare. Peer-reviewed and widely respected in defence scholarship.
06. Georgetown University Press: Focuses on national security, strategic studies, and joint operations, often integrating air and cyber power perspectives. Peer review ensures analytical rigour.
07. Harvard University Press: Publishes landmark works in military thought, strategic theory, and statecraft. Peer-reviewed and often agenda-setting, but highly selective.
08. Monash University Publishing: Australia’s Monash press contributes serious, well-researched studies on RAAF history and Indo-Pacific military developments. Scholarly editorial process with regional relevance.
09. Naval Institute Press: Offers doctrinal, operational, and campaign-level works—often authored by retired officers or practitioners. While not peer-reviewed, internal editorial standards are strong.
10. Osprey Publishing: Publishes compact, technically accurate campaign and aircraft studies. Often written by serving or ex-military experts—useful for tactical insight and force-level context, not strategic theory.
11. Oxford University Press (OUP): One of the most prestigious scholarly presses. Peer-reviewed, deeply researched, and foundational in the fields of military history, strategy, and air power.
12. Pen & Sword Books: Focuses on military memoir, unit history, and tactical studies. Authors are often ex-service personnel or enthusiasts; use for colour and ground-level insight, not doctrine or strategy.
13. Potomac Books: Now under the University of Nebraska Press, Potomac publishes credible, accessible titles that often bridge practitioner experience and strategic analysis.
14. Princeton University Press: Peer-reviewed and academically rigorous, Princeton specialises in strategic theory, deterrence, coercion, and doctrinal studies—particularly useful for air and space power thinkers.
15. RAND Corporation: Produces peer-reviewed, policy-oriented research on military force structure, deterrence, and air power strategy. Widely used in defence ministries and staff colleges.
16. Routledge (Taylor & Francis): A major academic publisher. All books undergo peer review, and it publishes extensively in air power doctrine, military ethics, and joint operations theory.
17. University of Nebraska Press: Through its Potomac imprint, offers credible works on air campaigns, Cold War operations, and NATO history. Balances accessibility and scholarly oversight.
18. University Press of Kentucky: Specialises in joint operations, military biography, and campaign analysis. Peer-reviewed titles with relevance to PME and defence history.
19. Yale University Press: Publishes some of the best academic work on warfare, grand strategy, and modern military history. Peer-reviewed and often foundational.
20. Stanford University Press: Strong in political science and security studies, with several titles examining military transformation, air and cyber power, and strategic decision-making. Peer-reviewed and respected for rigour.