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Almost from the first days of seafaring, men have used ships for
“spying†and intelligence collection. Since early in the
twentieth century, with the technological advancements of radio and
radar, the U.S. Navy and other government agencies and many other
navies have used increasingly specialized ships and submarines to
ferret out the secrets of other nations. The United States and the
Soviet Union/Russia have been the leaders in those efforts,
especially during the forty-five years of the Cold War. But, as
Norman Polmar and Lee J. Mathers reveal, so has China, which has
become a major maritime power in the twenty-first century, with
special interests in the South China Sea and with increasing
hostility toward the United States. Through extensive, meticulous
research and through the lens of such notorious spy ship events as
the Israeli attack on the USS Liberty, the North Korean capture of
the USS Pueblo, and the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency’s
success in clandestinely salvaging part of a Soviet submarine with
the Hughes Glomar Explorer, Spy Ships is a fascinating and valuable
resource for understanding maritime intelligence collection and
what we have learned from it. Â
The closest we've ever come to the end of the worldDEFCON-2 is the
best single volume on the Cuban Missile Crisis published and is an
important contribution to the history of the Cold War. Beyond the
military and political facts of the crisis, Polmar and Gresham
sketch the personalities that created and coped with the crisis.
They also show us how close we came to the edge without becoming
sensationalistic.
--Larry Bond, bestselling author of Dangerous GroundSpy-satellite
and aerial-reconnaissance photos reveal that one of the United
States's bitterest enemies may be acquiring weapons of mass
destruction and the means to use them against the American
homeland. Administration officials refuse to accept intelligence
professionals' interpretation of these images and order an end to
spy missions over the offending nation. More than a month later,
after vicious infighting, the president orders the spy missions to
resume. The new photos reveal an array of ballistic missiles,
capable of carrying nuclear warheads and striking deep within U.S.
territory. It appears that the missiles will be fully operational
within one week.This is not a plot setup for a suspense novel; it
is the true story of the most terrifying moment in the 45-year Cold
War between the United States and the Soviet Union: the Cuban
Missile Crisis. DEFCON-2 tells this tale as it has never been told
before--from both sides, with the help of hundreds of recently
declassified U.S. and Soviet documents, as well as interviews with
numerous former spies, military figures, and government officials
who speak out here for the first time.
The world entered the atomic age in August 1945, when the B-29
Superfortress nicknamed Enola Gay flew some 1,500 miles from the
island of Tinian and dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima, Japan.
The "Little Boy" bomb exploded with the force of 12.5 kilotons of
TNT, nearly destroying the city. Three days later, another B-29
dropped an atomic bomb on Nagasaki. The Japanese government, which
had been preparing a bloody defense against an invasion,
surrendered six days later. The aircraft was the primary artifact
in an exhibition at the National Air and Space Museum from 1995 to
1998. The original, controversial exhibit script was changed, and
the final exhibition attracted some 4 million visitors, testifying
to the enduring interest in the aircraft and its mission. This book
tells the story of the Enola Gay, the Boeing B-29 program, and the
combat operations of the B-29 type. After nearly two decades of
restoration, the Enola Gay will be one of the highlights of the
museum's new Udvar-Hazy Center, which is scheduled to open at
Dulles International Airport on December 15, 2003.
Submarines had a vital, if often unheralded, role in the superpower
navies during the Cold War. Their crews carried out
intelligence-collection operations, sought out and stood ready to
destroy opposing submarines, and, from the early 1960s, threatened
missile attacks on their adversary s homeland, providing in many
respects the most survivable nuclear deterrent of the Cold War. For
both East and West, the modern submarine originated in German
U-boat designs obtained at the end of World War II. Although
enjoying a similar technology base, by the 1990s the superpowers
had created submarine fleets of radically different designs and
capabilities. Written in collaboration with the former Soviet
submarine design bureaus, Norman Polmar and K. J. Moore
authoritatively demonstrate in this landmark study how differing
submarine missions, antisubmarine priorities, levels of technical
competence, and approaches to submarine design organizations and
management caused the divergence.
"Aircraft Carriers" is the definitive history of world aircraft
carrier development and operations. Norman Polmar's revised and
updated, two-volume classic describes the political and
technological factors that influenced aircraft carrier design and
construction, meticulously records their operations, and explains
their impact on modern warfare. Volume I provides a comprehensive
analysis of carrier developments and warfare in the first half of
the twentieth century, and examines the advances that allowed the
carrier to replace the battleship as the dominant naval weapons
system. Polmar gives particular emphasis to carrier operations from
World War I, through the Japanese strikes against China in the
1930s, to World War II in the Atlantic, Mediterranean, Arctic, and
Pacific theatres. It begins with French inventor Clement Ader's
remarkably prescient 1909 description of an aircraft carrier. The
book then explains how Britain led the world in the development of
aircraft-carrying ships, soon to be followed by the United States
and Japan. While ship-based aircraft operations in World War I had
limited impact, they foreshadowed the aircraft carriers built in
the 1920s and 1930s. The volume also describes the aircraft
operating from those ships as well as the commanders who pioneered
carrier aviation. "Aircraft Carriers"has benefited from the
technical collaboration of senior carrier experts Captain Eric M.
Brown and General Minoru Genda as well as noted historians Robert
M. Langdon and Peter B. Mersky. "Aircraft Carriers" is heavily
illustrated with more than 400 photographs-some never before
published-and maps. Volume II, which is forthcoming from Potomac
Books in the winter 2006-2007 (ISBN 978-1-57488-665-8), will cover
the period 1946 to the present.
A must-read for submarine buffs! On the morning of April 10, 1963,
the world's most advanced submarine was on a test dive off the New
England coast when she sent a message to a support ship a thousand
feet above her on the surface: experiencing minor problem . . .
have positive angle . . . attempting to blow . . . . Then came the
sounds of air under pressure and a garbled message: . . . test
depth . . . Last came the eerie sounds that experienced navy men
knew from World War II: the sounds of a submarine breaking up and
compartments collapsing. When she first went to sea in April of
1961, the U.S. nuclear submarine Thresher was the most advanced
submarine at sea, built specifically to hunt and kill Soviet
submarines. In The Death of the USS Thresher, renowned naval and
intelligence consultant Norman Polmar recounts the dramatic
circumstances surrounding her implosion, which killed all 129 men
on board, in history's first loss of a nuclear submarine.
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