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United States Naval Power in a Changing World
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By Edwin Bickford Hooper
ISBN: 0-275-92738-5
ISBN-13: 978-0-275-92738-7
310 pages, bibliog., figs.,
Praeger Publishers
Publication: 11/11/1988
List Price: $115.00 (UK Sterling Price: £65.00)
Availability:
Media Type: Hardcover
Reviews:
  • This work represents a long and detailed search for the `fundamental principles concerning the naval power needs of the nation.' The late Admiral Hooper, former director of naval history, carefully traces the vital role of naval power throughout the nation's history, and in particular the increasing bureaucratization and overcontrol of the Navy Department since WW II by reorganization and by an enormously increased Department of Defense staff. Well written and in language appropriate for readership at all levels, Hooper makes a good case for the `lean, highly decentralized, efficient bilinear system of the Navy Department.' Good US naval histories are rarities; this one is highly recommended. Compare with In Peace and War, ed. by Kenneth J. Hagan (1984) and with Edward L. Beach's The United States Navy (1986). Excellent notes, bibliography, index.
    —Choice
  • In sum, the valedictory work of this eminently respected naval historian serves not only as a status report on the present Navy, but also as a roadmap of sorts for the future fleet.
    —Sea Power
Description: United States Naval Power in a Changing World presents a selective review of naval power, changes in power that have occured over time, and the employment of that power during peace and war times. The volume arose from Hooper's concern over national military policies that seem to ignore the lessons of the past and demonstrate a lack of understanding of the continued relevance of naval power. Hooper pays particular attention to naval policy; naval capabilities and mission; determinants and influence of naval power; management of naval affairs; exercise of command over operating forces; and interservice relationships.
Table of Contents:
  • Basic Considerations
  • Part I: The Early Years
  • Naval Power and Winning Independence
  • Consequences of Neglect
  • Part II: The Transitional Period
  • Coming of Age
  • Advancing Technology
  • The Role of Naval Power in Preserving the Union
  • Inland Waters
  • Concluding of Warfare between the States Developments in Iron-clad Ships and Torpedoes Continuing Riverine War in the West
  • The Postwar Period
  • Part III: The New Navy
  • Beginnings of the New Navy
  • Warfare Against a European Power
  • Prelude to Another War
  • Part IV: Two World Wars
  • The Great War
  • America Enters the War
  • Between Wars
  • Another Global War
  • The Crucial War at Sea
  • A Two-Ocean War
  • Turning the Tide
  • World War II: The Final Phases
  • Part V: The Nuclear Age
  • The Cold War
  • Erosion
  • Limited War
  • The New Look
  • Naval Influence
  • Flexible Response
  • The Shifting Balance of Sea Power
  • Part VI: The Future
  • The Past Is Prologue
  • Requisites
LC Card Number: 87-29942
LCC Class: VA55
Dewey Class: 359
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