Leaving World War I and heading into World War II the United States Navy had to prepare for an unforeseen future on the open seas. After the attack on Pearl Harbor the United States was thrust into World War II and needed an effective amphibious landing doctrine to be able to counter adversary advances. This thesis covers the evolution of landing doctrine from the beginning to the end of World War II while highlighting the impacts that Operations Torch, Husky, Shingle, and Overlord had on the Navy\u27s landing doctrine after the war
On 19 February 1945, U.S. Marines of the Fifth Amphibious Corps waded through the sand and surf of t...
The landing at Inchon in September 1950 is one of the most dramatic such transitions from defense to...
This thesis examines what may have happened if the Japanese Navy possessed skilled pilots at the Bat...
During the South Pacific campaigns of World War II, the United States Navy faced a formidable challe...
Abstract: This thesis examines the evolution of institutionalized doctrine, strategy and tactics re...
The interwar period was a time of innovation and creation of doctrine in the U.S. Navy. The tactics ...
At the outbreak of the Second World War, Germany launched a devastating submarine campaign against t...
Recent military events have reinforced a long-held naval belief in the necessity for a maritime nati...
Amphibious operations are a topic central to the history of World War Two in the Pacific Theatre. T...
The basic strategic problems confronting the U.S. Navy during the interwar years of the 1920s and 19...
This is a case study of operational and tactical innovation in the U.S. Navy during World War II. It...
By 1921, the Imperial Japanese Navy had come to view the United States of America as its "hypothetic...
The United States was not fully prepared for war in the Atlantic Ocean directly after the bombing of...
“The tyranny of dissonance” among Australia’s geography, history, values, and political interests ha...
Perhaps no prediction has been as consistently made—and as consistently wrong—as the imminent death ...
On 19 February 1945, U.S. Marines of the Fifth Amphibious Corps waded through the sand and surf of t...
The landing at Inchon in September 1950 is one of the most dramatic such transitions from defense to...
This thesis examines what may have happened if the Japanese Navy possessed skilled pilots at the Bat...
During the South Pacific campaigns of World War II, the United States Navy faced a formidable challe...
Abstract: This thesis examines the evolution of institutionalized doctrine, strategy and tactics re...
The interwar period was a time of innovation and creation of doctrine in the U.S. Navy. The tactics ...
At the outbreak of the Second World War, Germany launched a devastating submarine campaign against t...
Recent military events have reinforced a long-held naval belief in the necessity for a maritime nati...
Amphibious operations are a topic central to the history of World War Two in the Pacific Theatre. T...
The basic strategic problems confronting the U.S. Navy during the interwar years of the 1920s and 19...
This is a case study of operational and tactical innovation in the U.S. Navy during World War II. It...
By 1921, the Imperial Japanese Navy had come to view the United States of America as its "hypothetic...
The United States was not fully prepared for war in the Atlantic Ocean directly after the bombing of...
“The tyranny of dissonance” among Australia’s geography, history, values, and political interests ha...
Perhaps no prediction has been as consistently made—and as consistently wrong—as the imminent death ...
On 19 February 1945, U.S. Marines of the Fifth Amphibious Corps waded through the sand and surf of t...
The landing at Inchon in September 1950 is one of the most dramatic such transitions from defense to...
This thesis examines what may have happened if the Japanese Navy possessed skilled pilots at the Bat...