I have been asked to speak about the evolution of naval power and, particularly, to identify the characteristics of an effective naval force out to the year 2010. My attempt to do so is divided into three parts. After some necessary preliminaries, I offer seven propositions that deal with the future of naval power, broadly considered, and with alternatives for the development and use of naval forces. I conclude by drawing implications for a nation such as France
By looking to the maritime past and scuttling the idea that somehow the “gray zones” of today have i...
The beginning of the 20th century was the stage for Mahan\u27s concepts for seapower, and while his ...
In this age, the terms war and peace do not suffice to describe the complex realities with which...
The Expansion of Force. Among the more important of the new complexities confronting both analysis...
I have been asked to consider the influence of sea power on modern strategy, to appraise its importa...
Over the past year there have been numerous studies, conducted by the Navy and several other organiz...
Much attention has been given to the role of seapower and naval forces in the conduct of war. The Na...
The twenty-first century will see the emergence of maritime powers that have the capacity and capabi...
The U.S. Navy finds itself on the cusp of a shift in the makeup and use of its forces as fundamental...
Like other forms of military power, naval forces have a political function, only more so. And while ...
The title of my talk today is the role of the Navy in future warfare. In such a discussion my inclin...
National power exists only to serve the national purposes, to help achieve the national aims
In an address delivered during the Seapower Symposium at the Naval War College, Adm. Arleigh A. Burk...
Admiral Colbert, faculty and students of the School of Naval Warfare, I am very happy to have the op...
Maritime strategy has always been concerned with the use of the sea for a purpose. In the modern wor...
By looking to the maritime past and scuttling the idea that somehow the “gray zones” of today have i...
The beginning of the 20th century was the stage for Mahan\u27s concepts for seapower, and while his ...
In this age, the terms war and peace do not suffice to describe the complex realities with which...
The Expansion of Force. Among the more important of the new complexities confronting both analysis...
I have been asked to consider the influence of sea power on modern strategy, to appraise its importa...
Over the past year there have been numerous studies, conducted by the Navy and several other organiz...
Much attention has been given to the role of seapower and naval forces in the conduct of war. The Na...
The twenty-first century will see the emergence of maritime powers that have the capacity and capabi...
The U.S. Navy finds itself on the cusp of a shift in the makeup and use of its forces as fundamental...
Like other forms of military power, naval forces have a political function, only more so. And while ...
The title of my talk today is the role of the Navy in future warfare. In such a discussion my inclin...
National power exists only to serve the national purposes, to help achieve the national aims
In an address delivered during the Seapower Symposium at the Naval War College, Adm. Arleigh A. Burk...
Admiral Colbert, faculty and students of the School of Naval Warfare, I am very happy to have the op...
Maritime strategy has always been concerned with the use of the sea for a purpose. In the modern wor...
By looking to the maritime past and scuttling the idea that somehow the “gray zones” of today have i...
The beginning of the 20th century was the stage for Mahan\u27s concepts for seapower, and while his ...
In this age, the terms war and peace do not suffice to describe the complex realities with which...