|
Showing 1 - 15 of
15 matches in All Departments
This unique and comprehensive account describes the interplay of
internal and external factors in the emergence of the
Austro-Hungarian Navy from a coastal defence force in 1904 to a
respectable battle force capable of the joint operations with other
Triple Alliance fleets in the Mediterranean by the eve of World War
I. By 1914 the Austro-Hungarian Navy was the sixth largest navy in
the world and the quality of its officers and men was widely
recognised by most European naval observers at the time. The book
describes the relationships between naval leaders, the heir to the
throne Archduke Francis Ferdinand, and the Parliament in shaping
the dual Monarchy's naval policy. It also shows how the changes in
foreign policy in Italy and underlying animosities between Rome and
Vienna led to a naval race in the Adriatic that eventually
bolstered Germany's naval position in respect to Great Britain in
the North Sea.
This work explains and critically examines the main theoretical
aspects of operational warfare at sea. It utilizes diverse examples
from naval history, ranging from the ancient era to the present
day, to offer a comprehensive description and analysis of the key
components of operational warfare at sea today. Specifically, it
explains the military/naval objectives, levels of war, types of
major naval/joint operations and maritime campaigns, and their main
elements. In contrast to many works, this book focuses on the role
of the naval operational commanders in command and control and
decision-making. It also describes in great detail the main
elements of naval operational leadership and operational thinking,
which are illustrated by examples of successful warfighting
admirals. This new edition has been completely revised and updated,
with three new chapters, and analyses in even more detail the
planning and execution of major naval/joint operations and maritime
campaigns. This book is intended to serve as a primer of how to
plan, prepare, and execute major naval/joint operations and
maritime campaigns for naval operational commanders and their
staffs, but will also be of great interest to students of naval
power, strategic studies, and military history in general.
This book explains both the strategic and the operational aspects
of exercising control of the sea. The struggle for sea control
consists of three mutually related and overlapping phases:
obtaining, maintaining and exercising sea control. It is in the
phase of exercising sea control when one's strategic or operational
success is exploited; otherwise, the fruits of victories achieved
would be wasted. This work describes the strategy of a stronger
side in wartime after a desired degree of control has been
obtained, which is followed by a discussion on the objectives and
main methods used in exercising sea control. The remaining chapters
explain and analyze in some detail each of the main methods of
exercising sea control: defence and protection of one's own and
destruction/neutralization of the enemy's military-economic
potential at sea, capturing the enemy's operationally important
positions ashore, destroying/weakening the enemy's
military-economic potential ashore and supporting one's ground
forces in their offensive and defensive operations on the coast.
This book will be of much interest to students of strategic
studies, sea power and naval history.
This work explains and critically examines the main theoretical
aspects of operational warfare at sea. It utilizes diverse examples
from naval history, ranging from the ancient era to the present
day, to offer a comprehensive description and analysis of the key
components of operational warfare at sea today. Specifically, it
explains the military/naval objectives, levels of war, types of
major naval/joint operations and maritime campaigns, and their main
elements. In contrast to many works, this book focuses on the role
of the naval operational commanders in command and control and
decision-making. It also describes in great detail the main
elements of naval operational leadership and operational thinking,
which are illustrated by examples of successful warfighting
admirals. This new edition has been completely revised and updated,
with three new chapters, and analyses in even more detail the
planning and execution of major naval/joint operations and maritime
campaigns. This book is intended to serve as a primer of how to
plan, prepare, and execute major naval/joint operations and
maritime campaigns for naval operational commanders and their
staffs, but will also be of great interest to students of naval
power, strategic studies, and military history in general.
This book explains both the strategic and the operational aspects
of exercising control of the sea. The struggle for sea control
consists of three mutually related and overlapping phases:
obtaining, maintaining and exercising sea control. It is in the
phase of exercising sea control when one's strategic or operational
success is exploited; otherwise, the fruits of victories achieved
would be wasted. This work describes the strategy of a stronger
side in wartime after a desired degree of control has been
obtained, which is followed by a discussion on the objectives and
main methods used in exercising sea control. The remaining chapters
explain and analyze in some detail each of the main methods of
exercising sea control: defence and protection of one's own and
destruction/neutralization of the enemy's military-economic
potential at sea, capturing the enemy's operationally important
positions ashore, destroying/weakening the enemy's
military-economic potential ashore and supporting one's ground
forces in their offensive and defensive operations on the coast.
This book will be of much interest to students of strategic
studies, sea power and naval history.
This book focuses on the theory and practice of maritime strategy
and operations by the weaker powers at sea. Illustrated by examples
from naval and military history, the book explains and analyzes the
strategies of the weaker side at sea in both peacetime and wartime;
in defense versus offense; the main prerequisites for disputing
control of the sea; and the conceptual framework of disputing
control of the sea. It also explains and analyzes in some detail
the main methods of disputing sea control - avoiding/seeking
decisive encounters, weakening enemy naval forces over time,
counter-containment of enemy naval forces, destroying the enemy's
military-economic potential at sea, attacks on the enemy coast,
defense of the coast, defense/capturing important positions/basing
areas, and defense/capturing of a choke point. A majority of the
world's navies are currently of small or medium-size. In the case
of a war with a much stronger opponent, they would be strategically
on the defensive, and their main objective then would be to dispute
control of the sea by a stronger side at sea. This book provides a
practical guide to such a strategy. This book would be of much
interest to students of naval power, maritime security, strategic
studies and military/naval history.
This book focuses on the theory and practice of maritime strategy
and operations by the weaker powers at sea. Illustrated by examples
from naval and military history, the book explains and analyzes the
strategies of the weaker side at sea in both peacetime and wartime;
in defense versus offense; the main prerequisites for disputing
control of the sea; and the conceptual framework of disputing
control of the sea. It also explains and analyzes in some detail
the main methods of disputing sea control - avoiding/seeking
decisive encounters, weakening enemy naval forces over time,
counter-containment of enemy naval forces, destroying the enemy's
military-economic potential at sea, attacks on the enemy coast,
defense of the coast, defense/capturing important positions/basing
areas, and defense/capturing of a choke point. A majority of the
world's navies are currently of small or medium-size. In the case
of a war with a much stronger opponent, they would be strategically
on the defensive, and their main objective then would be to dispute
control of the sea by a stronger side at sea. This book provides a
practical guide to such a strategy. This book would be of much
interest to students of naval power, maritime security, strategic
studies and military/naval history.
This book focuses on the key naval strategic objectives of
obtaining and maintaining sea control. During times of war, sea
control, or the ability of combatants to enjoy naval dominance,
plays a crucial role in that side's ability to attain overall
victory. This book explains and analyzes in much greater detail sea
control in all its complexities, and describes the main methods of
obtaining and maintaining it. Building on the views of naval
classical thinkers, this book utilizes historical examples to
illustrate the main methods of sea control. Each chapter focuses on
a particular method, including destroying the enemy forces by a
decisive action, destroying enemy forces over time-attrition,
containing enemy fleet, choke point control, and capturing
important enemy's positions/basing area, The aim is to provide a
comprehensive theory and practice of the struggle for sea control
at the operational level. It should therefore provide a guide to
practitioners on how to plan and conduct operational warfare at
sea. The book will be of much interest to students of naval
strategy, defence studies and security studies.
This unique and comprehensive account describes the interplay of
internal and external factors in the emergence of the
Austro-Hungarian Navy from a coastal defence force in 1904 to a
respectable battle force capable of the joint operations with other
Triple Alliance fleets in the Mediterranean by the eve of World War
I. By 1914 the Austro-Hungarian Navy was the sixth largest navy in
the world and the quality of its officers and men was widely
recognised by most European naval observers at the time. The book
describes the relationships between naval leaders, the heir to the
throne Archduke Francis Ferdinand, and the Parliament in shaping
the dual Monarchy's naval policy. It also shows how the changes in
foreign policy in Italy and underlying animosities between Rome and
Vienna led to a naval race in the Adriatic that eventually
bolstered Germany's naval position in respect to Great Britain in
the North Sea.
This book focuses on the key naval strategic objectives of
obtaining and maintaining sea control. During times of war, sea
control, or the ability of combatants to enjoy naval dominance,
plays a crucial role in that side's ability to attain overall
victory. This book explains and analyzes in much greater detail sea
control in all its complexities, and describes the main methods of
obtaining and maintaining it. Building on the views of naval
classical thinkers, this book utilizes historical examples to
illustrate the main methods of sea control. Each chapter focuses on
a particular method, including destroying the enemy forces by a
decisive action, destroying enemy forces over time-attrition,
containing enemy fleet, choke point control, and capturing
important enemy's positions/basing area, The aim is to provide a
comprehensive theory and practice of the struggle for sea control
at the operational level. It should therefore provide a guide to
practitioners on how to plan and conduct operational warfare at
sea. The book will be of much interest to students of naval
strategy, defence studies and security studies.
The Naval War College Review was established in 1948 and is a forum
for discussion of public policy matters of interest to the maritime
services. The forthright and candid views of the authors are
presented for the professional education of the readers. Articles
published are related to the academic and professional activities
of the Naval War College. They are drawn from a wide variety of
sources in order to inform, stimulate, and challenge readers, and
to serve as a catalyst for new ideas. Articles are selected
primarily on the basis of their intellectual and literary merits,
timeliness, and usefulness and interest to a wide readership. The
thoughts and opinions expressed in this publication are those of
the authors and are not necessarily those of the U.S. Navy
Department or the Naval War College.
The Naval War College Review was established in 1948 and is a forum
for discussion of public policy matters of interest to the maritime
services. The forthright and candid views of the authors are
presented for the professional education of the readers. Articles
published are related to the academic and professional activities
of the Naval War College. They are drawn from a wide variety of
sources in order to inform, stimulate, and challenge readers, and
to serve as a catalyst for new ideas. Articles are selected
primarily on the basis of their intellectual and literary merits,
timeliness, and usefulness and interest to a wide readership. The
thoughts and opinions expressed in this publication are those of
the authors and are not necessarily those of the U.S. Navy
Department or the Naval War College.
Naval history as generally recounted is a story of battles at sea.
However, it has to be admitted that since 1945 neither the United
States nor any other contemporary naval power has had much of a
naval history in this sense. Domination of the oceans by the United
States and its allies, together with the fortunate failure of the
Cold War to culminate in a test of strength between the American
and Soviet navies, meant that classic naval battle gradually faded
from center stage in the education and professional orientation of
American naval officers. Beginning in the early years of the Cold
War, the Navy became preoccupied largely with technology and the
tactical proficiency that rapidly advancing naval and weapons
technologies made increasingly necessary. At the extreme, of
course, the advent of nuclear weapons seemed to many to leave the
Navy little role in a major global conflict other than to provide
invulnerable launch platforms for these weapons-and thereby a
powerful deterrent that would, as it was thought, obviate their
actual use. Beyond that, though, the switch to nuclear propulsion
for the Navy's capital ships laid heavy technical demands on new
generations of naval officers, with concomitant impact on their
education and training. The result-or so contends Milan Vego in On
Major Naval Operations, the thirty-second volume in the Naval War
College Press's Newport Papers series-has been a long-standing
neglect by the U.S. Navy of major naval operations and, more
broadly, of the "operational" level of war or of naval "operational
art." The term "operational art" is apt to be unfamiliar to most
Americans. American military officers encounter it routinely as a
fixture of contemporary joint military doctrine, but even today the
concept has substantially less traction within the U.S. Navy than
it does in the other services. The reason is plainly that its
origins are in land warfare-specifically, in large-scale land
warfare as theorized by the German and (especially) Soviet
militaries during the interwar period and practiced by these
countries in World War II. From the latter, it migrated to the U.S.
Army in the late 1970s, as the Army sought novel ways to grapple
with the increasingly formidable prospect of a Soviet ground
assault against Western Europe. Essentially, "operational art"
refers to a level of command intermediate between the tactical and
the strategic, one associated with ground command at the level of
field army or corps and with the conduct of "campaigns" that unfold
as a series of interconnected battles over time. That many naval
officers remain unconvinced of its applicability to their own
domain is not surprising, given the narrowly tactical focus of much
naval warfare of the past. (Wayne Hughes's classic treatise Fleet
Tactics, for example, begins by dismissing the utility of the
concept of operational-level warfare for naval combat.) On the
other hand, it is difficult to deny that naval command and control
doctrine and practice today are insufficiently attentive to what in
Army parlance would be called a "combined arms" approach to
warfare. The tenuous relationship between the three principal naval
warfare communities remains the strongest argument for a serious
reconsideration by the Navy of major naval operations and
operational art. Dr. Milan Vego is a professor in the Joint
Military Operations Department of the Naval War College. He has
published widely on the history of German and Soviet military
doctrine, and he is the author of Operational Art (2001) and Joint
Operational Warfare (2008), an authoritative textbook currently
utilized in the department's curriculum. In this work, he looks
back to the richly instructive experience of the U.S. Navy in World
War II (as well as in more recent operations during the Korean and
Vietnam wars and in the Persian Gulf) in order to develop a
taxonomy of naval operational art that can help inform the thinking
of the Navy as a whole today.
|
You may like...
Higher
Michael Buble
CD
(1)
R459
Discovery Miles 4 590
|