The initial strategic decision which dictated our course in this war was adopted by the secret at Washingtion in March 1941 between the British and American Joint Chiefs of Staff. Rear Admirals R.L Ghormley and Richmond Kelly Turner, and Captains Alan kirk and DeWitt Ramsey represented the U.S, Navy. The decision there made, incoportated in the ABC-1 Staff Agreement of 27 March 1941, was this: If and when America enters the war, she will exert the principle United States military effort in the European theater
As the Navy, the Naval War College in particular, continues to work toward the articulation of a new...
Over the centuries, nations have used maritime strategies in a variety of ways for a variety of purp...
American naval policy and doctrine from 1900 to World War ll was oriented almost exclusively to the ...
The initial strategic decision which dictated our course in this war was adopted by the secret confe...
Much ink has been spilled of late on the question of whether the Maritime Strategy is the U.S. Navy\...
In this second article of a three-part series, Professor Stephen E. Ambrose examines the strategic d...
The Pacific phase of the Second World War was almost exclusively an American Naval operation. As suc...
On 1 May 1919, the acting secretary of the Navy, Franklin D, Roosevelt, wrote the Secretary of State...
In late 1945, the United States navy confronted a postwar world wholly unlike the strategic situatio...
Naval strategic concepts are the product of the international strategic environment. Naval forces, i...
It is not my purpose to bring you to have an exaggerated opinion of the importance of naval capabili...
During the last months of World War II, several important strategic decisions were made which were o...
Given its national aims, geographical position. and alliance structure, it is essential that the Uni...
There are many similarities in the strategic position of Germany before 1914 and the Soviet Union to...
The basic fundamental mission of the Navy in the past and it will continue to be so in the future is...
As the Navy, the Naval War College in particular, continues to work toward the articulation of a new...
Over the centuries, nations have used maritime strategies in a variety of ways for a variety of purp...
American naval policy and doctrine from 1900 to World War ll was oriented almost exclusively to the ...
The initial strategic decision which dictated our course in this war was adopted by the secret confe...
Much ink has been spilled of late on the question of whether the Maritime Strategy is the U.S. Navy\...
In this second article of a three-part series, Professor Stephen E. Ambrose examines the strategic d...
The Pacific phase of the Second World War was almost exclusively an American Naval operation. As suc...
On 1 May 1919, the acting secretary of the Navy, Franklin D, Roosevelt, wrote the Secretary of State...
In late 1945, the United States navy confronted a postwar world wholly unlike the strategic situatio...
Naval strategic concepts are the product of the international strategic environment. Naval forces, i...
It is not my purpose to bring you to have an exaggerated opinion of the importance of naval capabili...
During the last months of World War II, several important strategic decisions were made which were o...
Given its national aims, geographical position. and alliance structure, it is essential that the Uni...
There are many similarities in the strategic position of Germany before 1914 and the Soviet Union to...
The basic fundamental mission of the Navy in the past and it will continue to be so in the future is...
As the Navy, the Naval War College in particular, continues to work toward the articulation of a new...
Over the centuries, nations have used maritime strategies in a variety of ways for a variety of purp...
American naval policy and doctrine from 1900 to World War ll was oriented almost exclusively to the ...