Urban Geometry and the Marines in Fallujah is a structural analysis of how urban defensive systems collapse under synchronized pressure. Rather than framing Fallujah as a chaotic street-by-street fight, the book reveals the city as a layered geometric system-one built from rooftops, courtyards, stairwells, interior nodes, and visibility corridors that shape how defenders move, observe, and resist.
Across one hundred chapters, the book traces the predictable sequence of collapse that unfolds when depth, mobility, shaping, and observation fail in order. It shows how defenders rely on rooftop networks for lateral movement, interior nodes for protected mobility, and visibility corridors for coordination-and how Marines systematically fractured each of these elements through tempo, synchronization, and multi-axis pressure.
The narrative explains that collapse is not a dramatic moment but a structural process: layers fail when defenders lose the time, space, and geometry required to coordinate. As Marines advanced, each gain in observation or mobility reshaped the defenders' options, compressing their movement into narrower, more predictable patterns. The book demonstrates how early penetration reveals the district's underlying logic, how mid-district geometry constrains defender behavior, and how terminal layers collapse once interior depth can no longer support organized retreat.
At the operational level, the book shows how district-level collapse creates momentum across the city, enabling resets, accelerating tempo, and denying defenders the ability to reconstitute. At the strategic level, it argues that urban warfare is governed not by emotion or improvisation but by structure-by the geometry of the environment and the defenders' ability to shape it.
Clear, disciplined, and documentary in tone, Urban Geometry and the Marines in Fallujah offers a new way to understand urban combat: not as chaos, but as a system whose failures can be read, anticipated, and shaped.