Recent military events have reinforced a long-held naval belief in the necessity for a maritime nation to maintain an amphibious assault capability. The British reconquest of the Falklands again demonstrated the efficacy of amphibious forces, even when outnumbered and facing high technology, stand-off weapons
National power exists only to serve the national purposes, to help achieve the national aims
Maritime strategy has always been concerned with the use of the sea for a purpose. In the modern wor...
Today, the United States is the dominant sea power of the world—unchallenged by friend, unchecked by...
The Napoleonic Wars have provided generations of soldiers and sailors with lessons and case studies,...
To approach teh sea side of maneuver warfare, one ought first to understand its nature and content i...
In the wake of DESERT STORM and the phenomenal success of the coalition forces, it appeared to a con...
The U.S. Marine Corps concept for the projection of naval power ashore is known as Operational Mane...
HMS Alacrity, a type 21 general-purpose frigate, sailed from the United Kingdom on 5 April 1982 and ...
The potential destructiveness of intercontinental ballistic missiles has led lo a situation in which...
Perhaps no prediction has been as consistently made—and as consistently wrong—as the imminent death ...
The extraordinary commitment of naval forces to the Persian Gulf since June 1987 raises a number of ...
The discussion arranges itself in three parts: (1) an examination of strategic significance; (2) a ...
A survey of contemporary navy and marine personnel as to what were the most important amphibious ass...
It is clear that the Chairman, Joint Chiefs of Staff and the Commander-in-Chief, U.S. Central Comma...
When Iraqi tanks crossed the border of Kuwait, the United States crossed the threshold of a new mili...
National power exists only to serve the national purposes, to help achieve the national aims
Maritime strategy has always been concerned with the use of the sea for a purpose. In the modern wor...
Today, the United States is the dominant sea power of the world—unchallenged by friend, unchecked by...
The Napoleonic Wars have provided generations of soldiers and sailors with lessons and case studies,...
To approach teh sea side of maneuver warfare, one ought first to understand its nature and content i...
In the wake of DESERT STORM and the phenomenal success of the coalition forces, it appeared to a con...
The U.S. Marine Corps concept for the projection of naval power ashore is known as Operational Mane...
HMS Alacrity, a type 21 general-purpose frigate, sailed from the United Kingdom on 5 April 1982 and ...
The potential destructiveness of intercontinental ballistic missiles has led lo a situation in which...
Perhaps no prediction has been as consistently made—and as consistently wrong—as the imminent death ...
The extraordinary commitment of naval forces to the Persian Gulf since June 1987 raises a number of ...
The discussion arranges itself in three parts: (1) an examination of strategic significance; (2) a ...
A survey of contemporary navy and marine personnel as to what were the most important amphibious ass...
It is clear that the Chairman, Joint Chiefs of Staff and the Commander-in-Chief, U.S. Central Comma...
When Iraqi tanks crossed the border of Kuwait, the United States crossed the threshold of a new mili...
National power exists only to serve the national purposes, to help achieve the national aims
Maritime strategy has always been concerned with the use of the sea for a purpose. In the modern wor...
Today, the United States is the dominant sea power of the world—unchallenged by friend, unchecked by...