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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.
From the foreword: "As our nation and our Navy shift their focus
away from the land wars in Iraq and Afghanistan that have so
dominated our internal conversations for more than a decade and
pivot toward the Asia-Pacific region, it is most appropriate that
this study, You Cannot Surge Trust, should make its appearance. The
assembled authors, under the assured editorial hand of Sandra
Doyle, bring forward a series of episodes that demonstrate the
evolving and increasingly important nature of maritime coalition
operations around the world. Beginning with a look at maritime
interception operations in the Arabian Gulf during Operations
Desert Shield and Desert Storm, this work moves forward through the
post-Cold War era to include recent operations in the Middle East
and central Asia. Written from a multinational point of view, the
analysis suggests that nations, even superpowers, are increasingly
dependent upon each other for support during major combat
operations and that only by frequent consultation, exercises,
cooperation in technology development, and understanding of force
structure capabilities will future maritime coalitions be
successful. This study also advances a larger argument regarding
the relevance of naval and maritime history in defense policy
development. The challenges faced by coalition forces during the
1991 to 2005 period are not so different from what confronted those
who sailed before. The crews of Continental Navy ships during the
American Revolution had difficulty keeping up with French ships
owing to differences in the size of the respective fleets and
individual ship design. During World Wars I and II the U.S. and
Royal navies consistently had to overcome problems inherent in
differences in classification and communications. Lastly, in the
increasingly geopolitical complexities of modern warfare,
illustrated by our experiences operating alongside allies in Korea
and Vietnam, history reveals that the different rules of engagement
under which nations exercise their forces can cause conflicts
within a partnership-even as the partners prosecute a conflict.
Each of these issues has been raised before, each is examined
within You Cannot Surge Trust, and each will raise its head again
in some future hostility."
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.
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