<P>This new handbook provides a comprehensive overview of the issues facing naval strategy and security in the twenty-first century. </P> <P>Featuring contributions from some of the worldβs premier researchers and practitioners in the field of naval strategy and security, this handbook covers naval
Naval Strategy and National Security: An International Security Reader
β Scribed by Steven E. Miller (editor); Stephen Van Evera (editor)
- Publisher
- Princeton University Press
- Year
- 2014
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 400
- Series
- International Security Readers; 914
- Edition
- Course Book
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
These essays from the journal International Security cover aspects of past and present naval technologies and explore current disputes over American naval doctrine. Four of the contributions--those by Linton Brooks, John Mearsheimer, Barry Posen, and Joshua Epstein--describe the case for and against the Reagan administration's controversial Maritime Strategy, which has formed the basis for the administration's buildup to a six-hundred-ship navy. Other articles describe Soviet naval doctrine, assess the risk of nuclear war at sea, and outline the evolution of major naval technologies and doctrines.
Part I: Naval Strategy Planning a Navy: The Risks of Conventional Wisdom R. James Woolsey Naval Power and National Security: The Case for the Maritime Strategy Linton F. Brooks A Strategic Misstep: The Maritime Strategy and Deterrence in Europe John J. Mearsheimer Horizontal Escalation: Sour Notes of a Recurrent Theme Joshua M. Epstein Naval Power and Soviet Global Strategy Michael MccGwire Part II: Naval Technology Technology and the Evolution of Naval Warfare Karl Lautenschlager Will Strategic Submarines Be Vulnerable? Richard L. Garwin The Submarine in Naval Warfare, 1901=2001 Karl Lautenschlager Stopping the Sea-Based Counterforce Threat Harold A. Feiveson and John Duffield Part III: Naval Operations--Controlling the Risks Nuclear War at Sea Desmond Ball Inadvertent Nuclear War? Escalation and NATO's Northern Flank Barry R. Posen A Quiet Success for Arms Control: Preventing Incidents at Sea Sean M. Lynn-Jones
Originally published in 1988.
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β¦ Table of Contents
Contents
The Contributors
Preface
Part 1: Naval Strategy
Planning a Navy: The Risks of Conventional Wisdom
Naval Power and National Security
A Strategic Misstep
Horizontal Escalation
Naval Power and Soviet Global Strategy
Part II: Naval Technology
Technology and the Evolution of Naval Warfare
Will Strategic Submarines Be Vulnerable?
The Submarine in Naval Warfare, 1901-2001
Stopping the Sea- Based Counterforce Threat
Part III: Naval Operationsβ Controlling the Risks
Nuclear War at Sea
Inadvertent Nuclear War?
A Quiet Success for Arms Control
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