Among the many terrible things used for the first time in the great World War, the airplanes and submarines attracted the most notice. On February 4, 1915, the German government proclaimed a war zone about the British Isles and declared its intention of sinking without warning any enemy merchant ships found within this zone. On May 1, 1915, the Lusitania was sunk. On February 1, 1917, Germany began her "ruthless submarine warfare". Immediately, friendly relations were broken off and on April 6, 1917, the United States declared war. At first it seemed as if the Germans would win. Then it was found that the submarines could be seen from airplanes directly above ; also very swift tropedo boats, destroyers, were able to drive them away. As a ma...
Cultural perceptions guided the American use of submarines during the twentieth century. Feared as a...
The contribution of US submarines to the Battle of the Atlantic during the Second World War has been...
45-48 The submarine is a deadly danger lurking underwater for enemy ships. But it could be equally l...
Here, reduced to scrap iron, lies what is left of one of the Kaiser's sea pirates. Who shall tell ho...
Also published in he Law of Naval Waifare: Targeting Enemy Merchant Shipping 28 (Naval War College I...
John P. Holland, a resident of Patterson, New Jersey, an Irishman by birth, built the first practica...
all areas of operation. At the completion of each patrol commanding a patrol report to the Chief of ...
When first published in 1995, this book was hailed as an absolutely indispensable contribution to th...
At the close of the First World War, American submarines compared most unfavorably with those of Ger...
The German High Command (OHL) and the Foreign Office (Aus Amt) searched for new military strategies ...
At the close of the First World War, American submarines compared most unfavorably with those of Ger...
Following the First World War, the tide of public opinion was overwhelmingly against the submarine a...
German naval commentator's ideas on the subject; "Rear Admiral Lutzow" possibly pseudonym based on G...
Cultural perceptions guided the American use of submarines during the twentieth century. Feared as a...
Germany entered World War One engaged in a heated naval race with Great Britain. The introduction o...
Cultural perceptions guided the American use of submarines during the twentieth century. Feared as a...
The contribution of US submarines to the Battle of the Atlantic during the Second World War has been...
45-48 The submarine is a deadly danger lurking underwater for enemy ships. But it could be equally l...
Here, reduced to scrap iron, lies what is left of one of the Kaiser's sea pirates. Who shall tell ho...
Also published in he Law of Naval Waifare: Targeting Enemy Merchant Shipping 28 (Naval War College I...
John P. Holland, a resident of Patterson, New Jersey, an Irishman by birth, built the first practica...
all areas of operation. At the completion of each patrol commanding a patrol report to the Chief of ...
When first published in 1995, this book was hailed as an absolutely indispensable contribution to th...
At the close of the First World War, American submarines compared most unfavorably with those of Ger...
The German High Command (OHL) and the Foreign Office (Aus Amt) searched for new military strategies ...
At the close of the First World War, American submarines compared most unfavorably with those of Ger...
Following the First World War, the tide of public opinion was overwhelmingly against the submarine a...
German naval commentator's ideas on the subject; "Rear Admiral Lutzow" possibly pseudonym based on G...
Cultural perceptions guided the American use of submarines during the twentieth century. Feared as a...
Germany entered World War One engaged in a heated naval race with Great Britain. The introduction o...
Cultural perceptions guided the American use of submarines during the twentieth century. Feared as a...
The contribution of US submarines to the Battle of the Atlantic during the Second World War has been...
45-48 The submarine is a deadly danger lurking underwater for enemy ships. But it could be equally l...