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Full color and black and white images throughout. Historical study
covers the service in the Asia-Pacific region of the U.S. Seventh
Fleet during the 20th and 21st centuries. The Fleet saw combat in
nearly every major battle of World War II in the Pacific as well as
in the Cold War conflicts in Korea and Vietnam. Today the Fleet
acts as a deterrence to aggressor nations in the region, provides
humanitarian relief in times of disaster, participates in joint and
combined exercises, and conducts counter-terrorism and anti-pirate
operations.
Franklin Delano Roosevelt had a lifelong love for the United States Navy. Inspired as a youth by the U.S. Fleet's dramatic impact on the global stage, and its use overseas by his illustrious cousin, Theodore Roosevelt, Franklin quite naturally focused his eyes on the sea. FDR and the U.S. Navy presents the work of prominent biographers and historians who analyzed Franklin D. Roosevelt's long, close, and eventful association with the United States Navy, in war and peace, from the turn of the century to the end of World War II. The contributors show how as President during the 1930s, FDR endeavored with naval leaders, not always successfully, to build a combat-capable fleet and to deter the aggressor nations of Europe and Asia. The essays argue that one of Franklin Roosevelt's greatest achievements was his direction as Commander in Chief of the U.S. Navy and the other American armed forces during World War II, when the very survival of the nation was at stake. This book is the product of a day-long conference, entitled "Franklin D. Roosevelt and the U.S. Navy," that was held on October 22, 1996 at the U.S. Navy Memorial Foundation's Heritage Center on Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington, DC. It is both a powerful tribute and an important historical work on FDR.
A superbly illustrated examination of how the US Navy's most
powerful fleet fought the Vietnam War, covering all of its elements
from aircraft carriers and heavy cruisers to minesweepers and
oilers. The US Navy's Seventh Fleet was at the forefront of
America's campaign in Vietnam for a decade, from the Gulf of Tonkin
Incident that began it all to the final evacuation of South
Vietnam. Its mission was highly strategic, and while its primary
role was to provide carrier-based air power over North Vietnam â
from Rolling Thunder through Linebacker â the fleet's operations
were complex, sensitive, and varied, and required all the
capabilities of the fleet. This book is the first overall
examination of how US Navy's most powerful fleet fought and
operated in Vietnam. Distilled from thousands of declassified
secret documents by renowned US Navy specialist Dr Edward J.
Marolda, it offers a unique new portrait of how the Seventh Fleet
fought the Vietnam War, from the offensive strike power of naval
aviation to the vital role of fleet logistics. As well as the
carrier operations, he examines the surface combatant fleet's
gunfire support role, and its raids against the North Vietnamese
coast. Dr Marolda also looks at amphibious warfare, fleet air
defense, search-and-rescue, and mining and interdiction operations.
Illustrated throughout with archive photos, 3D diagrams and
spectacular new artwork, and informed by never-before-translated
official documents, publications, and personal accounts from North
Vietnamese, Soviet, and Chinese sources, this is the real story
behind the US Navy's Vietnam War.
During much of the 19th and 20th centuries, the Washington Navy
Yard was the most recognizable symbol of the United States Navy in
the nation's capital. The shipyard built a number of the Navy's
first warships and repaired, refitted, and provisioned most of the
frigates, sloops, and other combatants of the fledgling naval
service. The masts and rigging of USS Constitution were a common
site on the banks of the Anacostia River. Booming cannon became a
routine sound in southeast Washington during the mid-19th century
as Commander John A. Dahlgren, "father of American naval ordnance,"
test-fired new guns for the fleet. The Naval Gun Factory's fire and
smoke-belching blast furnaces, foundries, and mills gave birth to
many of the fleet's weapons, from small boat howitzers to the
enormous 14-inch and 16-inch rifles that armed the naval railway
batteries in World War I and the Iowa-class battleships in World
War II and the Cold War. Rear Admiral David W. Taylor inaugurated a
new era in ship development when he used scientific measurements in
his Experimental Model Basin to test the properties of prototype
hulls. Before and after World War I, the pioneers of naval aviation
experimented in the Anacostia and navy yard facilities with various
seaplane types, shipboard catapults, and other equipment that would
soon revolutionize warfare at sea. The Washington Navy Yard has
been a witness to history-to the evolution of the United States of
America from a small republic, whose ships were preyed upon by
Barbary corsairs and whose capital was burned by an invading
British army, into a nation of enormous political, economic, and
military power and global influence. The Civil War that so
dramatically altered American society swirled around and through
the Washington Navy Yard. American presidents, first ladies,
foreign kings and queens, ambassadors from abroad, legendary naval
leaders, national heroes and villains, and millions of citizens
have all passed through Latrobe Gate during the yard's 200-year
existence. The Washington Navy Yard has also been the workplace for
tens of thousands of Americans, a familiar landmark in the District
of Columbia, and a valued member of the Washington community.
Throughout the 19th and 20th centuries, ship riggers, hull
caulkers, iron and bronze smiths, joiners, millwrights, machinists,
foundrymen, boilermakers, and tool and die makers; skilled workmen
and laborers; naval officers, bluejackets, and marines have earned
their livings within the walls of the navy yard. Numerous
Americans, white and black, male and female, have spent their
entire working lives at the yard building warships, manufacturing
guns, testing vessel and aircraft models, training sailors, or
administering the needs of American combatants steaming in the
distant waters of the world. Navy yard workers, as many as 26,000
men and women at one point in 1944, contributed to the success of
U.S. arms in the Spanish-American War, World Wars I and II, the
Cold War, and Operation Desert Storm. Yard workers, most of them
residents of the District, Maryland, and Virginia, over the years
have helped local authorities extinguish fires, hold back flood
waters, rescue victims of natural disasters, and care for needy
members of the surrounding neighborhoods. They have helped federal
authorities put together national celebrations to mark the end of
the country's wars, repair the Capitol and other government
buildings, receive the sacred remains of unknown U.S. servicemen
from overseas, stage presidential inaugurations, and welcome
foreign dignitaries to American soil. Above all, they have loyally
served the United States and the U.S. Navy. This richly illustrated
history was written in the bicentennial year to highlight the
importance of the Washington Navy Yard and its employees to the
nation, the Navy, and the District of Columbia. It touches on the
major activities of the facility and on some of the yard's past
workers and significant visitors.
When the U.S. Seventh Fleet embarked the last of 50,000 Vietnamese
evacuees, got underway from Vietnam's southern coast, and set a
course for the Philippines on the evening of 2 May 1975, it marked
the end of America's longest war. For more than 25 years, the
United States and its allies had fought to preserve the
independence of free governments in South Vietnam, Laos, and
Cambodia, but that effort had failed. Vietnamese, Laotian, and
Cambodian Communist movements and military forces now held sway
over the entire Indochinese peninsula. The struggle for Southeast
Asia, however, was only one episode in the even longer Cold War
that began in 1946 and ended with the collapse of global communism
in the late 1980s. The 58,000 Americans who sacrificed their lives
in Vietnam marched in the same proud ranks as the tens of thousands
of their compatriots who fought and died to achieve ultimate
victory in the Cold War. The U.S. Navy was in the forefront of the
fight. More than 2.6 million Sailors and Marines served in the
combat theater at one time or another. It is the objective of this
series, The U.S. Navy and the Vietnam War, to honor the faithful
service to their country of those men and women who, in John Paul
Jones' immortal words, went in harm's way to fight for freedom.
Between 2008 and 2015, the 50th anniversary of the onset of major
combat operations in 1965, the Naval History and Heritage Command
and the Naval Historical Foundation will collaborate in publishing
well-illustrated, engagingly written, and authoritative booklets
that detail the Navy's major involvement in the conflict. We have
enlisted to the cause distinguished authors and charged them with
producing interpretative essays based on research in primary
sources and the best secondary works. First in the series, The
Approaching Storm covers the global, regional, and ideological
stimulants of the conflict, setting the stage for subsequent
booklets on the fight for the rivers and canals of Vietnam, naval
special warfare, the POW experience, the Rolling Thunder bombing
campaign, Navy medicine at war, coastal operations, the Linebacker
bombing campaign, Navy leaders, naval advisors and the Vietnam
Navy, sealift and naval logistics, Seabees and construction, naval
intelligence, and the seaborne evacuations from Indochina. It is
important for this and future generations of Americans to
understand that in the war for Southeast Asia our Sailors fought
with skill, courage, and perseverance in often trying
circumstances. They were sorely tested but never failed to do their
duty. This illustrated book describes the U.S. response to
Communist movements in Asia after World War II and the U.S. Navy's
role in the region as it evolved from an essentially advisory one
to actual combat after the Tonkin Gulf attack off North Vietnam in
August 1964. Approaching Storm inaugurates the Naval History &
Heritage Commands series the U.S. Navy in the Vietnam War.
U.S. interest in the far east dates from the earliest years of the
republic, when American merchant ships sailed across the vast
pacific to ply their trade in the ports of China, the Philippines,
Indochina, and the East Indies. Warships of the U.S. Navy followed
soon afterward to protect those commercial carriers and to promote
American diplomatic interests in Asia. The U.S. Seventh Fleet,
successor to the Asiatic Squadron and Asiatic Fleet of the 19th and
early 20th centuries, began making its own naval history in the
early days of World War II. Unique among the nation's naval forces,
the fleet has taken part in all the major conflicts and most of the
crises and confrontations of the last six decades. It has defended
U.S. interests and worked with America's Asian alliances to deter
aggressors and maintain peace and stability in the region. The
fleet's sailors have provided humanitarian assistance and disaster
relief to numerous countries devastated by natural and manmade
disasters. The fleet's area of responsibility in the 21st century
encompasses 48 million square miles of the Pacific and Indian
oceans, an area holding half of the world's population, 35 nations,
and many of its most prosperous economies. Much of the world's
energy resources and oceangoing trade passes through waters guarded
by the warships, aircraft, and men and women of the U.S. seventh
fleet, whose motto is appropriately - Ready Power for Peace.
With full color maps, photographs and illustrations throughout.
FULL COLOR reprint of 1998 study from the United States Naval
Historical Center. This volume describes in detail the U.S. Navy's
role in Operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm, one of the most
successful campaigns in American military history. The work
describes the contribution to victory of Navy men and women who
served afloat in the carrier-based fighter and attack squadrons,
the surface warships, amphibious and mine countermeasures vessels,
submarines, and logistic and hospital ships. It also relates the
activities of American sailors ashore or close inshore who
protected the vital harbors of northern Saudi Arabia, provided
Marine combat units with medical and construction assistance, flew
vital supplies to forward areas, or coordinated all this activity
on Navy and joint staffs. Overall, it is a story of Navy men and
women, regular and reserve, who unselfishly answered their nation's
call to arms when aggression threatened peace in the Persian Gulf.
The Naval History and Heritage Command published this history to
enhance our understanding of the pivotal role played by the U.S.
Seventh Fleet in the Western Pacific from World War II through
2010. This project is in keeping with the Command's ongoing efforts
to provide naval personnel with historical information and analysis
that directly support their global mission. No naval command has
done more than the Seventh Fleet to defend and promote American
interests in Asia. This "fighting fleet" was in the forefront of
U.S. forces involved in the Pacific campaigns of World War II and
the conflicts in Korea, Vietnam, and the Arabian Gulf. In the last
half of the 20th century and the first decade of the 21st century,
the Seventh Fleet has stood as a bulwark against aggression and
partnered with America's Asian allies to maintain peace and
stability in this vital region. Whether combating conventional
forces, guerrillas, insurgents, pirates, or terrorists, Seventh
Fleet Sailors have routinely displayed exceptional courage and
dedication, serving also as ambassadors for America's core values
of freedom, democracy, free market enterprise, and respect for
human rights.
Full color and black and white images throughout. Historical study
covers the service in the Asia-Pacific region of the U.S. Seventh
Fleet during the 20th and 21st centuries. The Fleet saw combat in
nearly every major battle of World War II in the Pacific as well as
in the Cold War conflicts in Korea and Vietnam. Today the Fleet
acts as a deterrence to aggressor nations in the region, provides
humanitarian relief in times of disaster, participates in joint and
combined exercises, and conducts counter-terrorism and anti-pirate
operations.
Navy Medicine in Vietnam begins and ends with a humanitarian
operation-the first, in 1954, after the French were defeated, when
refugees fled to South Vietnam to escape from the communist regime
in the North; and the second, in 1975, after the fall of Saigon and
the final stage of America's exit that entailed a massive
helicopter evacuation of American staff and selected Vietnamese and
their families from South Vietnam. In both cases the Navy provided
medical support to avert the spread of disease and tend to basic
medical needs. Between those dates, 1954 and 1975, Navy medical
personnel responded to the buildup and intensifying combat
operations by taking a multipronged approach in treating
casualties. Helicopter medical evacuations, triaging, and a system
of moving casualties from short-term to long-term care meant higher
rates of survival and targeted care. Poignant recollections of the
medical personnel serving in Vietnam, recorded by author Jan
Herman, historian of the Navy Medical Department, are a reminder of
the great sacrifices these men and women made for their country and
their patients.
This book focuses on the three prongs of the naval trident that
President Nixon wielded during the final years of the Vietnam War:
naval air power, naval bombardment, and mine warfare. For much of
this period, Navy aircraft sought to hamper the flow of supplies
down the Ho Chi Minh Trail in Laos-a huge investment in air power
resources that ultimately proved fruitless. After North Vietnam's
invasion of the South in 1972, however, Navy tactical aviation, as
well as naval bombardment, proved critical not only in blunting the
offensive but also in persuading North Vietnam to arrive at a peace
agreement in Paris in 1973. For the first time in the war, the Navy
was also authorized to close Haiphong Harbor and North Vietnam's
other ports with naval mines-an operation that still stands out as
a textbook example of how mine warfare can inflict a major economic
and psychological blow on the enemy with minimal casualties for
either side. Thus, naval power was indispensible to ending
America's longest war.
Originally published in 1986 by the Naval Historical Center, United
States Department of the Navy. 608 pages. maps. ill.
Throughout its history, the yard has been associated with names
like Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln, and Kennedy. Kings and queens
have visited the yard; its waterfront has seen many historic
moments; and some of our Navy's most senior and most notable
officers have called it home. Such legendary ships as USS
Constitution and USS Constellation sailed from its piers, and the
14-inch and 16-inch guns that armed our Navy's battleships during
Word Wars I and II were built in its factories.
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