It is popularly understood that after the spectacular American victory at the battle of Midway the aircraft carrier reigned supreme; that war at sea was changed completely; and that the presence of America’s two surviving carriers after the sinking of Admiral Chuichi Nagumo’s four flattops forced the cancellation of the Midway invasion and the retreat of Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto’s eleven battleships, sixteen cruisers, and fifty-three destroyers from the Central Pacific
At the close of World War II, the combined fleets of the United States and Great Britain included ov...
The Introduction to Turning the Tide: The Battles of Coral Sea and Midway introduces the reader to t...
We military historians have a tendency to obsess over the causes of victory and defeat in war. Like ...
It is popularly understood that after the spectacular American victory at the battle of Midway the a...
Six decades after the spectacular American victory over the Imperial Japanese Navy’s First Air Fleet...
This is a case study of operational and tactical innovation in the U.S. Navy during World War II. It...
Midway was one of the most decisive naval battles of all time. It was a battle that should have been...
Was the battle of Midway won or lost? In a recent edition of the Naval War College Review, James Lev...
A new, twenty-first-century design of the size of USS Midway with an air wing up to sixty-five aircr...
The Japanese raid into the Indian Ocean is both a great what-if of World War II and an indication of...
The focus of the Naval War College Review Winter 2010 issue on the maritime strategic perspective in...
The Battle of Midway is remembered as one of the greatest military victories in American history and...
The basic strategic problems confronting the U.S. Navy during the interwar years of the 1920s and 19...
The geopolitical competitors of the United States are seeking ways to nullify the American capabilit...
The recently commissioned JS Hyuga—a multirole, through-deck, helicopter-carrying destroyer— is the ...
At the close of World War II, the combined fleets of the United States and Great Britain included ov...
The Introduction to Turning the Tide: The Battles of Coral Sea and Midway introduces the reader to t...
We military historians have a tendency to obsess over the causes of victory and defeat in war. Like ...
It is popularly understood that after the spectacular American victory at the battle of Midway the a...
Six decades after the spectacular American victory over the Imperial Japanese Navy’s First Air Fleet...
This is a case study of operational and tactical innovation in the U.S. Navy during World War II. It...
Midway was one of the most decisive naval battles of all time. It was a battle that should have been...
Was the battle of Midway won or lost? In a recent edition of the Naval War College Review, James Lev...
A new, twenty-first-century design of the size of USS Midway with an air wing up to sixty-five aircr...
The Japanese raid into the Indian Ocean is both a great what-if of World War II and an indication of...
The focus of the Naval War College Review Winter 2010 issue on the maritime strategic perspective in...
The Battle of Midway is remembered as one of the greatest military victories in American history and...
The basic strategic problems confronting the U.S. Navy during the interwar years of the 1920s and 19...
The geopolitical competitors of the United States are seeking ways to nullify the American capabilit...
The recently commissioned JS Hyuga—a multirole, through-deck, helicopter-carrying destroyer— is the ...
At the close of World War II, the combined fleets of the United States and Great Britain included ov...
The Introduction to Turning the Tide: The Battles of Coral Sea and Midway introduces the reader to t...
We military historians have a tendency to obsess over the causes of victory and defeat in war. Like ...