One Hundred Years of Sea Power: The U. S. Navy, 1890-1990

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Stanford University Press, Jul 1, 1996 - History - 553 pages
This powerfully argued, objective history of the modern U.S. Navy explains how the Navy defined its purpose in the century after 1890. It relates in detail how the Navy formed and reformed its doctrine of naval force and operations around a concept articulated by Captain Alfred Thayer Mahan - a concept of offensive sea control by a battleship fleet, and, new to America, the need to build and maintain an offensive battle fleet in peacetime. However, there were many years, notably in the 1920's and after World War II, when there was no enemy at sea, when the country turned inward, when the Navy could not count on support for an expensive peacetime battle fleet. After 1945, especially, the inappropriateness of Mahanian principles strained a service that had taken them for granted, as did the centralization of the military establishment and the introduction of new weapons. What, then, did the Navy do? It shrewdly adapted old ideas to new technology. To reclaim its position in a general war, and avoid being transformed into a mere transport service, the Navy (with the Marine Corps) proved it was capable of power projection onto the land through seaborne bombers armed with nuclear weapons and by building a ballistic missile-launching submarine force. The growth of a Soviet sea force in the 1970's and 1980's revived the moribund sea power doctrine, but the Navy's bid for strategic leadership failed in the face of the war-avoidance policy of the Cold War. With the dissolution of the Soviet Union, the Navy finally retired Mahan's doctrine that the defeat of the enemy fleet was the Navy's primary objective. Having proven itself in the course of the century as ever adaptable, the service movedback from sea control to a doctrine of expeditionary littoral warfare. This volume, then, is a history of how a war-fighting organization responded - in doctrine, strategy, operations, preparedness, self-awareness, and force structure - to radical changes in political circumstance,
 

Contents

Introduction
1
ON THE
7
Sea Power and the Fleet Navy 18901910
9
The New Navy 18981913
27
Neutrality or Readiness? 19131917
49
War Without Mahan 19171918
64
Parity and Proportion 19191922
83
Treaty Navy 19221930
104
Victory Drives 19441945
248
FROM THE
273
Why Do We Need a Navy? 19451949
275
Naval Strategy 19501954
314
Containment and the Navy 19521960
332
The McNamara Years 19611970
367
Disarray 19701980
394
High Tide 19801990
418

Adapt and Innovate 19311938
119
Are We Ready? 19381940
146
Sea Control 19411942
181
Strategic Offensives 19431944
222
Conclusion
445
Notes
455
Index
543
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