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Innovation in Carrier Aviation - Naval War College Newport Papers 37 (Paperback)
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Innovation in Carrier Aviation - Naval War College Newport Papers 37 (Paperback)
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Loot Price R527
Discovery Miles 5 270
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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In a widely noted speech to the Navy League Sea-Air-Space Expo in
May 2010, Secretary of Defense Robert M. Gates warned that "the
Navy and Marine Corps must be willing to reexamine and question
basic assumptions in light of evolving technologies, new threats,
and budget realities.We simply cannot afford to perpetuate a status
quo that heaps more and more expensive technologies onto fewer and
fewer platforms-thereby risking a situation where some of our
greatest capital expenditures go toward weapons and ships that
could potentially become wasting assets." Secretary Gates
specifically questioned whether the Navy's commitment to a force of
eleven carrier strike groups through 2040 makes sense, given the
extent of the anticipated superiority of the United States over
potential adversaries at sea as well as the growing threat of
antiship missiles. Though later disclaiming any immediate intention
to seek a reduction in the current carrier force, Gates
nevertheless laid down a clear marker that all who are concerned
over the future of the U.S. Navy would be well advised to take with
the utmost seriousness. We may stand, then, at an important
watershed in the evolution of carrier aviation, one reflecting not
only the nation's current financial crisis but the changing nature
of the threats to, or constraints on, American sea power, as well
as-something the secretary did not mention-the advent of a new era
of unmanned air and sea platforms of all types. Taken together,
these developments argue for resolutely innovative thinking about
the future of the nation's carrier fleet and our surface navy more
generally. In Innovation in Carrier Aviation, number thirty-seven
in our Newport Papers monograph series, Thomas C. Hone, Norman
Friedman, and Mark D.Mandeles examine the watershed period in
carrier development that occurred immediately following World War
II, when design advances were made that would be crucial to the
centrality in national-security policy making that carriers and
naval aviation have today. In those years several major
technological breakthroughs-notably the jet engine and nuclear
weapons-raised large questions about the future and led to an array
of innovations in the design and operational utilization of
aircraft carriers. Central to this story is the collaboration
between the aviation communities in the navies of the United States
and Great Britain during these years, building on the intimate
relationship they had developed during the war itself. Strikingly,
the most important of these innovations, notably the angled flight
deck and steam catapult, originated with the British, not the
Americans. This study thereby also provides interesting lessons for
the U.S. Navy today with respect to its commitment to maritime
security cooperation in the context of its new "maritime strategy."
It is a welcome and important addition to the historiography of the
Navy in the seminal years of the Cold War.
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