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Sacred Vessels - The Cult of the Battleship and the Rise of the U.S. Navy (Paperback)
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Sacred Vessels - The Cult of the Battleship and the Rise of the U.S. Navy (Paperback)
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Sacred Vessels is an irreverent account of the modern battleship
and its place in American naval history from the sinking of the
coal-fired Maine in Havana Harbor in 1898 to the deployment of the
cruise missile-armed Missouri in the Persian Gulf in 1991. With
provocative insight and wit, Robert O'Connell conclusively
demonstrates that the vaunted battleship was in fact never an
effective weapon of war, even before developments in aircraft and
submarine technology sealed its doom. The worlds navies failed to
recognize the full implications of rapid technological change at
the turn of the century but were enthralled by the revolutionary
design of the HMS Dreadnought, launched in 1903. Nations raced to
build and deploy the biggest, the fastest, and the greatest
possible number of battleships, usually at the expense of much more
effective forms of naval force. Dreadnoughts became the
international currency of great power status, subject to the same
anxious accountancy as nuclear weapons today. Their awesome beauty
captured the public s imagination and won the unquestioning
devotion of naval officers everywhere. When war came in 1914, the
world held its breath in anticipation of a modern-day Trafalgar,
but dreadnoughts everywhere avoided battle, and when they were
forced to fight, the results were inconclusive or irrelevant. In
spite of this display of impotence, the world's shipyards continued
to turn out the great vessels. The sinking of the heart of the U.S.
battlefleet at Pearl Harbor-an event that finally forced the United
States into World War II-ironically also began to shake the U.S.
Navy free from its infatuation with the dreadnought in favor of the
more practical charms of the aircraft carrier. Still, sheer faith
in the battleship ensured that it would live to fight again, this
time with even more questionable results. In fact, says O'Connell,
battleships have never played an important role in the outcome of
any modern war, but they have continued to be resurrected and
refurbished-even garnished with nuclear weapons-right up to the
present day. Television images of the Missouri and the Wisconsin
firing on the shores of Iraq in 1991 were not just a glimpse of an
anachronism: We were witnessing, with a lingering sense of awe, the
last gasp of a fire-breathing behemoth that in actuality was all
but toothless from the moment of its conception. Sacred Vessels is
more than the unmasking of a false idol of naval history. It is a
cautionary tale about the often unacknowledged influence of human
faith, culture, and tradition on the exceedingly important, costly,
and supposedly rational process of nations arming themselves for
war.
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