The unlimited states navy needs an official doctrine, now more than ever. Ten years ago, the Navy adopted its revolutionary Maritime Strategy; it was well suited for the 1980s, but its importance has diminished in proportion to the former Soviet threat. Global change, new technology, and fiscal constraints now demand the Navy take its next step. In order for it to incorporate successfully the changes necessary to face the combat realities of tomorrow, fundamental reassessments must be made today
A strategy, argues a distinguished Naval War College scholar, will show the maritime services what t...
The momentous events of 1989-1991 marked the end of the Soviet Union and, as a result, its threat to...
The extraordinary commitment of naval forces to the Persian Gulf since June 1987 raises a number of ...
In March 1993. the United States Navy and Marine Corps established the Naval Doctrine Command as the...
Maritime strategy has always been concerned with the use of the sea for a purpose. In the modern wor...
The essence of the new doctrine lies in current Russian views on the nature and requirements of futu...
Observers of military affairs will have noted a changed naval lexicon over the past several years. T...
The U.S. Navy’s traditional missions are generally less relevant today than in recent decades, becau...
The U.S. Navy finds itself on the cusp of a shift in the makeup and use of its forces as fundamental...
The article of record as published may be found at https://www.jstor.org/stable/4464287
The Soviet Union is now actively exerting strong worldwide political pressure by means of economic a...
The United States and the West already may have lost command of the sea. To deter a Chinese invasion...
For two decades the U.S. Navy has enjoyed total command of the sea, so much so that it has stopped t...
The U.S. Navy’s decision to truncate procurement of the original fleet of thirty-two guided-missile ...
The United States does not have a coordinated or articulated maritime policy sufficient to cope with...
A strategy, argues a distinguished Naval War College scholar, will show the maritime services what t...
The momentous events of 1989-1991 marked the end of the Soviet Union and, as a result, its threat to...
The extraordinary commitment of naval forces to the Persian Gulf since June 1987 raises a number of ...
In March 1993. the United States Navy and Marine Corps established the Naval Doctrine Command as the...
Maritime strategy has always been concerned with the use of the sea for a purpose. In the modern wor...
The essence of the new doctrine lies in current Russian views on the nature and requirements of futu...
Observers of military affairs will have noted a changed naval lexicon over the past several years. T...
The U.S. Navy’s traditional missions are generally less relevant today than in recent decades, becau...
The U.S. Navy finds itself on the cusp of a shift in the makeup and use of its forces as fundamental...
The article of record as published may be found at https://www.jstor.org/stable/4464287
The Soviet Union is now actively exerting strong worldwide political pressure by means of economic a...
The United States and the West already may have lost command of the sea. To deter a Chinese invasion...
For two decades the U.S. Navy has enjoyed total command of the sea, so much so that it has stopped t...
The U.S. Navy’s decision to truncate procurement of the original fleet of thirty-two guided-missile ...
The United States does not have a coordinated or articulated maritime policy sufficient to cope with...
A strategy, argues a distinguished Naval War College scholar, will show the maritime services what t...
The momentous events of 1989-1991 marked the end of the Soviet Union and, as a result, its threat to...
The extraordinary commitment of naval forces to the Persian Gulf since June 1987 raises a number of ...