Showing posts with label navy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label navy. Show all posts

Corvettes Canada: Convoy Veterans of WWII Tell Their True Stories Review

Corvettes Canada: Convoy Veterans of WWII Tell Their True Stories
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This is a story that almost no one seems to know about. I cant imagine being inside a 200 ft. tin can, in the worst possible weather for 3 or 4 years, fighting faster, better equipped U-boats (the corvettes were modified whalers with a 4 inch gun), with only a few breaks in between the battles. The corvettes weren't designed for prolonged ocean travel(mostly for coastal patrols) and yet they did the bulk of the allied ocean convoy work. I haven't finished the book yet, but I am thoroughly enjoying it so far.

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PC Patrol Craft of World War II: A History of the Ships and Their Crews Review

PC Patrol Craft of World War II: A History of the Ships and Their Crews
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Popularly known as "sub chasers", the 369 patrol craft ("PCs") launched during WW2 escorted convoys, hunted submarines, sank small craft, shot down airplanes, bombarded landing areas and led landing craft on to invasion beaches. None have been preserved, however, and their exploits are largely forgotten. William J. Veigele's "Patrol Craft of World War II", is an effort to rectify this oversight. The 400 page hardcover volume examines every aspect of the PC, including design, construction, crew training (most of the 50,000 men who served on PCs were reservists who had never been to sea), day-to-day life, exploits and disposition. It is supplemented by 118 b&w photographs, and 30 pages of excellent drawings showing every above-deck fitting. These drawings, compiled from sketches made by a 19-year-old sailor serving aboard PC 541, are especially noteworthy. They provide invaluable information for the model builder as well as anyone curious about the nuts and bolts of these hearty vessels.
The book's description of life aboard a PC is particularly fascinating. To put it mildly, these 174' vessels (by way of comparison, Flower class corvettes were 200' in length) were "lively". They pitched and rolled with a vengeance, and seasoned sailors aboard larger ships were amazed at the fearsome battering a heavy sea could inflict on a PC.
"PC 486 was escorting an American submarine returning from war patrol. The sea was rough with waves towering over the mast of the PC, which was often lost to view from men on the submarine. As the two vessels soared above the waves together, the Skipper on the submarine signaled to the PC, "We have an extra periscope on board. You're welcome to use it." The two ships disappeared from each other's views. A few minutes later they rose on the crest of waves into each other's views. Back flashed a reply from the Skipper of the PC, "Thank you, but we are below periscope depth."
Life for the 70 man PC crew was cramped and difficult. The constant battering and seasickness wore down even experienced sailors. But the hardship bred both camaraderie and an absence of formality not found on larger ships.
I highly recommend this book both to students of the US Navy and would be PC modelers. There is a wealth of technical information between its covers and even a set of fold out plans. But the books most valuable legacy is the way in which it captures the essence of life aboard these tough little ships. William Veigele can take pride in having written the definitive book about PCs and in doing so he has preserved their memory for future generations.
Contents
400 Pages, hardcover, 6"W x 9"L, 118 b+w photos
Chapter Headings
1. Need for and deployment of PCs 2. The design of PCs 3. The construction of PCs 4. PC crews and their training5. Life aboard a PC 6. PC exploits - General 7. PC exploits - American Theater of War 8. PC exploits - European, African, Middle Eastern Theatres
9. PC exploits - Asiatic, Pacific Theatres 10. PC Casualties 11. The naming, decommissioning and disposition of PCs 12. The Patrol Craft Sailors Association
Appendix
A: Technical characteristics of the PC Class B: Thirty engineering drawings showing PC design details C: Sixteen shipyards building PCs D: PCs built at each of the 16 yards showing hull number, date keel laid, launched and commissioned, deactivation date, disposition E: Construction program statistics F: Rates of enlisted men aboard WWII PCs G: Decorations and awards won by PCs H: The story behind PC 1264, the first ship with an all black crew I: PC crew casualties J: PC Sailor Association Museum
Notes: 18 pages
Index: 13 pages
Drawings: PC 461 class 12.5"x20" foldout plan (1 sheet reduced from 1/48 scale. Effective scale of the included plan is about 1:135) showing deck levels, fittings, profile, external details. Drawn by John Tombaugh, this is plate 1 of 2. Presumably plate 2 of 2 shows hull lines and cross sections. Both plates are available in 1/48th scale.

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Becoming a Leader the Annapolis Way Review

Becoming a Leader the Annapolis Way
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Excellent book. As a career Naval Officer, I have seen first hand how critical each of the leadership principles discussed in this book are. Throughout fleet, these are the skills, and values which distinguish the highly successful leaders from the mediocre. In a straightforward manner, the authors elucidate the 12 fundamental lessons which have been carefully honed over the course of the Naval Academy's long and impressive history of turning out admirable military, government and business leaders. When earnestly applied, these tenets will prove to be of significant value to leaders and organizations, whether military or civilian. In this highly enlightening book, Johnson and Harper blend sound psychological and sociological knowledge with gripping real life examples. In addition to being informative and thought provoking, the book is a fun read. I strongly recommend it.

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Eight Bells, and All's Well Review

Eight Bells, and All's Well
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Eight Bells (Original title: Eight Bells and All's Well)
"Eight Bells is the story of Gallery's life in the Navy. The things that happened were enough for three careers. With his brash and breezy writing style, his rapid-fire quips and his irreverent comments, he has produced a book which will not disappoint those who have come to expect high-spirited rollicking, entertainment from him." -- Navy News
"As exciting as fiction... his book is witty, improbable and outrageous." -- St. Louis Globe Democrat
On almost every page the author induces a smile, a grin and sometimes a downright belly laugh... The reader will find this really down to earth story a real treat." -- Virginia Pilot
"DAN GALLERY IS AN ADMIRABLE ADMIRAL.." -- Cleveland Plain Dealer

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The Naval Institute Guide to Combat Fleets of the World , 1998-1999: Their Ships, Aircraft, and Systems Review

The Naval Institute Guide to Combat Fleets of the World , 1998-1999: Their Ships, Aircraft, and Systems
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I disagree with the first review of this book. I am a naval officer and found Baker's book to be a terrific reference for naval platforms. Too many people confuse a reference with a novel which this is decidedly not. It's wealth of data surpasses that of Jane's at a fraction of the price. This book, combined with the Naval Institute's Guide to Naval Weapons Systems, makes a first rate navy reference library for a relatively small sum.Many of the photos are poor, but many readers do not appreciate how difficult it is to get quality photos of many foreign and domestic naval vessels. The book is organized by country and then in hierarchical platform categories. It contains far more data on each vessel than Baker's previous efforts which had more plain language discussion and less hard core data. I think it is a superior publishing and one of the best I've seen in 20 years of looking at these types of books. If you want flashy pictures and voluminous text, look elsewhere.

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Top Hook Review

Top Hook
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Everything looks great to Alan Craik and his spouse Rose Siciliano. The CIA appears ready to tap him for a highly regarded espionage position and the astronaut school has accepted Rose. Much faster than their rise to the top is their collapse caused by the machinations of someone else.

A woman in Venice blackmails CIA treasonous mole George Shreed. Panicking and already over the edge with his wife near death from cancer, George needs a fall guy who would have been on the project but not quite visible and with little protection to dub as the double agent selling secrets to the Chinese. He selects Rose. His covert actions lead the CIA to stop the promotions of Craik and Siciliano pending the results of an investigation into the activities of the duo. Their careers come to a halt but refusing to idly sit by as the taint of treason is painted on them, Alan and Rose begin their own inquiries into what short circuited their lives.

The third Craik-Siciliano thriller is loaded with action, action, and more action somewhat at the cost of character development. The story line emphasizes the shoot em up thrill a paragraph that never slows down, but for new readers Alan and Rose never seem quite real. Strangely the double agent is probably the most complete player in the tale as the audience understands his fears, doubts, and motives. Fans who enjoy an energizing espionage thriller will want to read Gordon Kent's latest global stimulating novel.

Harriet Klausner

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Born to Fly: The Untold Story of the Downed American Reconnaissance Plane Review

Born to Fly: The Untold Story of the Downed American Reconnaissance Plane
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Born To Fly
By Shane Osborn
With Malcolm McConnell

Lt. Shane Osborn was the mission commander and pilot of the U.S. Navy EP-3E AIRES II reconnaissance aircraft when it was rammed by a Chinese F-8 Finback II fighter over the South China Sea on April 1, 2001 during a routine recon mission.
As the world knows, Osborn heroically managed to pull his severely damaged four-engine turboprop out of a near vertical, inverted dive and somehow keep it flying long enough to land on the F-8's home base at Lingshui Air Base on Hainan Island. It was there that he and his crew of 23 were imprisoned by the Chinese for 11 days before the U.S. issued a statement that it regretted the loss of the F-8 pilot and the emergency landing on Chinese soil.
This 262-page book, an "as told to" military writer Malcolm McConnell, is a quick read but one gets the impression it was sanitized by the U.S. Navy, if not higher ups. That's to be expected, of course, as the aircraft was on a sensitive electronic intelligence mission and the airplane was packed with cryptologic technicians and others on "special missions."
Osborn, as far as we know, is still in the Navy so you won't find any criticisms of fellow crewmen, superiors or political higher ups. Everyone performed magnificently, everyone was brave and the politicians are all magnificent individuals.
Nevertheless, it was worth reading, even though Osborn tends to be a little too kind to himself in telling his life story preceding the collision. There's quite a bit of detail about his early years and how successfully he endured the toughness of his Navy training.
He makes a special point to let you know that he could have flown jets if only the Navy had some openings (in the Navy's hierarchal system, land-based four engine transport pilots are only a step above helicopter drivers in aviation status).
The real meat of the book, the events leading up to the collision and the resultant terrifying attempt to save the aircraft, are what makes it worth the price of admission. Osborn also has an amazing memory as he was able to recount the day to day experiences of himself and the crew once they were under house arrest by the Chinese.
What's not mentioned is much of how the other crew members got along, especially those crypto techs who must have been shaking in their boots because of their highly sensitive knowledge of classified information, who suddenly found themselves at the mercy of the Chinese.
No, this is Shane Osborn's story alone, although he does credit a special few of his crewmen with exemplary behavior (he did make note that one female crewmember seemed to freeze up at a particularly bad time; take that for what it's worth).
Osborn was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross for his actions that day (other crewmen received Air Medals) and no one can deny that he deserved it. McConnell deserves proper credit for how well he interpreted Osborn's memories to give the reader a taste of what it was like in the cockpit of that beleaguered aircraft.
The Chinese mind games - in which they repeatedly tried to get the crew to admit they "rammed" the fighter - while exhausting, were to be expected. What's surprising is that there was no violence and only some mild threats ever made against them.
In fact, after the decision was made to allow them to go home, Osborn said he was congratulated by the Chinese base commander for his loyalty to his crew. The Chinese interrogators and guards even requested pictures of themselves with the crew.

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From the age of three, Shane Osborn dreamed of being a pilot. He began learning the skills he would need to fly as a member of the Civil Air Patrol, a branch of the U.S. Air Force, when he was just twelve years old. But it wasn't until he graduated from the naval ROTC program at the University of Nebraska and joined the navy that his dream became a reality. For five years, Osborn practiced rigorous training exercises, working tirelessly day in and day out until he advanced from navy pilot to mission commander.All Lt. Osborn's flying skills were put to the test when a Chinese F-8 II fighter jet collided with his EP-3E ARIES II plane during a U.S. surveillance mission through international airspace. The impact severely damaged Osborn's aircraft, sending it plummeting toward the ocean. With almost certain disaster looming, Osborn managed to gain control of the crippled plane and land it safely on the Chinese island of Hainan—saving the lives of his twenty-three crewmates.In Born to Fly, Shane Osborn describes these terrifying events in vivid detail, along with the years of dedicated training that made the emergency landing possible. This is the inspirational story of a boy with a dream, and of the extraordinary discipline and courage that made him a hero.

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Teddy Roosevelt's Great White Fleet Review

Teddy Roosevelt's Great White Fleet
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James Reckner, a professor of history at Texas Tech University and a former officer in the United States Navy, examines the around-the-world cruise of the U.S. Navy's Atlantic Battleship Fleet in. Using government documents, newspapers, unpublished manuscripts, and a wide variety of secondary sources, Reckner argues that the logistical and diplomatic accomplishments of the Great White Fleet's cruise, which sailed the world from December 1907 to February 1909, remained a decisive factor in testing the capabilities of the U.S. Navy. The author suggests that historians have mistakenly emphasized the fleet's effect on diplomacy without considering the technical aspect of the fleet's voyage. Reckner asserts that the need to test the fleet proved the overriding consideration behind the Navy Department's decision to conduct the cruise. He highlights the significance of the cruise by repeatedly pointing out the number of obstacles facing early twentieth-century vessels, specifically that battleships of the period were far less reliable than modern warships. Reckner argues the Great White Fleet proved an influential cause behind the U.S. Navy's re-examination of its organization and battleship design during the world's unprecedented naval expansion prior to World War I. Reckner examines the state of naval affairs at the turn of the century and how it influenced a change in American naval policy during the Roosevelt administration. He traces the fleet's voyage of sixteen battleships and over 14,000 men as they departed from Hampton Roads, Virginia and sailed down the coast of South America, up the West Coast, only to pause for several weeks in San Francisco Harbor. While at California, naval officials reorganized the fleet and the ships got underway to cross the Pacific. After sailing to Hawaii, the fleet headed south to New Zealand and then Australia, Manila, Yokohama, Ceylon, Suez, various ports in the Mediterranean, before finally returning home to Virginia. Reckner reveals that the fleet's voyage of over 45,000 nautical miles produced a great deal of publicity for the United States Navy, ultimately boosting the prestige of American naval power abroad. However, he underscores the fact that the fleet had other national and international purposes as well. First, the U.S. Navy had to train the crews and determine the fleet's coal and provisions requirements. Reckner argues that the voyage confirmed various aspects of the Naval War College's new "War Plan Orange," the recently developed war plan against Japan. Second, the cruise launched a critical reexamination of the navy's administrative structure and the design for new ships. It ultimately led the U.S. Navy toward modernization, greater efficiency, and professionalism. Despite the effects of Roosevelt's Great White Fleet on naval matters, Reckner argues, the ultimate result of the fleet's voyage was its effect on foreign policy. The author points out that the traditional interpretation of the Great White Fleet as an example of Roosevelt's active foreign policy is erroneous. "This is a misconception," Reckner writes, "albeit one encouraged by Roosevelt himself" (p. 157). The author demonstrates that the voyage served as a good measure of the abilities of his battleship fleet in preparation for war. Accordingly, Reckner's study reinforces the connection between a strong military and an effective foreign policy. The author suggests that Roosevelt's "Big Stick" diplomacy, which served as a pillar to his corollary to the Monroe Doctrine, depended on the effectiveness of a strong naval presence so that the president's declaration that the impotence or chronic instability of neighboring countries might force the U.S. to intervene in its neighbors' affairs to forestall foreign intervention would be taken seriously. The strength of Reckner's study, however, lies with his treatment of the fleet's voyage. Reckner points out how the fleet was received in South America, the Pacific, and Europe. At every port of call, the author maintains, the ships, officers, and men of the Great White Fleet received friendly receptions in a carnival-like atmosphere which everyone used as an excuse for public holidays and festivities. Teddy Roosevelt's Great White Fleet is intended for the student of history with a significant knowledge of naval affairs and the political and diplomatic situation in the U.S. at the turn of the century. Reckner's work serves as a good supplementary source for the origins and the various trials surrounding the U.S. Navy's move toward establishing a modern naval force.

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Drawing on previously untapped sources, naval historian James Reckner provides a complete picture of the fleet that thrust the United States into the ranks of great world naval powers. His fresh interpretations of the fleet's historic 1907-09 world cruise, which won him the 1989 Roosevelt Naval History Prize, allow today's readers to fully appreciate the significance of the famous fleet that set sail during Teddy Roosevelt's second term as president. Reckner recreates the colorful pageantry of the event--sixteen U.S. battleships on a fourteen-month voyage around the world--that drew thousands of sightseers at every port of call, but his main emphasis is on the cruise's long-range impact on the Navy. He shows how the cruise revealed the fleet's shortcomings and forced the naval establishment to acknowledge the faults and make concessions that eventually led to permanent benefits.--This text refers to the Paperback edition.

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Assumed the Watch. Moored as Before. Review

Assumed the Watch. Moored as Before.
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Just finished what I consider is the definitive statement as to what is wrong with the current leadership of the U.S. Navy. Well written and to the point as why outstanding men and women are departing the officer ranks in droves leaving the Navy with a very shallow talent pool in which to select from its ranks officers that will command ships and squadrons. The USS Cowpens was a train wreak that because of cowardly senior naval officers that refused to acknowledge that naval higher authority by giving to Captain Graf command of the USS Cowpens it had given a ship to a female Captain Bligh. I recommend that all commanding and flag officers in the U.S. Navy be required to read this book.
GMC USN (retired)

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The USS Pelican, or the Pelican t as it was affectionately known, was the craziest, most nerve-racking ship in the navy. How was that possible, though, if it remained tied to the pier essentially for two years? This account contains the musings and observations of one junior officer attempting to stay sane aboard mighty Pelican. Likewise, it includes his attempts to do the same on a different ship this one doing circles in the middle of the Pacific Ocean.

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Project Azorian: The CIA and the Raising of K-129 Review

Project Azorian: The CIA and the Raising of K-129
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"Project Azorian: The CIA and the Raising of K-129" by naval historian Norman Polmar and documentary film producer Michael White provides the first unclassified, factual accounting of a unique event in world history - the loss of a nuclear-missile-equipped submarine in 1968, and its subsequent clandestine (partial) salvage by the CIA in 1974.
In the intervening 35-plus years, there have been many magazine and newspaper articles and several books addressing the K-129 and the CIA's recovery attempt -- incorrectly identifying the CIA effort as "Project Jennifer". Such reportings devolved over the years, as ignorance gradually was replaced by unsupported theories, wild speculation, and finally by absolute nonsense. These distortions and fantasies (represented as factual accountings) eventually motivated several men who participated in CIA's Project Azorian to step forward for in-depth interviews revealing the history of "Azorian" in intimate detail.
Added to the information obtained in these interviews of CIA & Naval officers, men onboard the Hughes Glomar Explorer, and ex-Soviet officials, Polmar & White have published actual photography of the K-129 wreck and, most astonishingly, have published the recorded sound trace of the catastrophe which sank that unfortunate ship. The acoustic recordings were captured by the U.S. Air Force hydrophone system operated by the Air Force Technical Applications Center (AFTAC) - and Polmar & White reveal that the Navy's SOSUS system never detected the deployment or identified the acoustic events associated with the loss of the K-129.
To these unprecedented sources, add a lengthy interview with ex-Soviet Admiral Viktor Dygalo, who was the K-129's Division Commander in 1968, and add a document review of Russian-language sources concerning Soviet naval activity in the Pacific in 1968. Polmar & White also include declassified documents revealing U.S. Pacific fleet surveillance and operational activities in the northern Pacific from February through May 1968, KH-4B satellite photography of the Petropavlavsk submarine complex in September 1967, and interviews with U.S. naval personnel who participated in events that conspiracy theorists can only speculate about (specifically an interview with the Officer-of-the-Deck of USS Swordfish when she bent her periscope, and with individuals involved in the 1971/72 Trieste dives north of Kauai). Finally, the book integrates the information revealed in a heavily censored 50-page CIA history released in 2010 in reaction to Michael White's documentary film. From these threads, Polmar and White weave the most complete and detailed rendering of this event available outside of the U.S. intelligence community.
Determining the cause of the loss by accident of any vessel is made difficult or impossible if there are no survivors to question, and lacking a forensic reconstruction of recovered parts. Yet, with a very detailed analysis of the acoustic information, Polmar & White come close to an explanation of the catastrophe. When the acoustics are combined with an examination of the photography, and Russian reports of K-129 communications problems at-sea are integrated - certain events identify themselves.
Like many such catastrophes, "Project Azorian" reveals that two or more highly improbable failures occurred in succession, finding a pathway to disaster which designers never considered, and provided no safety cut-out to prevent. Further expertise (probably only available in Russia from ex-Soviet naval architects, equipment designers, naval officers, and training specialists) will be required to verify and explain all the new evidence and identify a definitive chain-of-events to failure as well as "first cause".
After an extensive and detailed narrative of the CIA's "Project Azorian" salvage attempt, and its planned successor "Project Matador", Polmar & White review what the CIA salvaged from the wreck, and whether or not the "take" was worth the cost. An exquisitely detailed blow-by-blow discussion of the Project's intelligence-and-political-review process is included, providing the reader with an understanding of how "black" ops are evaluated and approved within the Executive Branch of government.
The book ends with eight appendices containing information on the K-129, its crew, its missiles, the USS Halibut (SSN-587), the lift ship (Hughes Glomar Explorer), the capture vehicle (the claw), and the "Hughes Mining Barge" (the submersible dry dock for the capture vehicle), 14 pages of "Notes", a "Book List", and a complete index. The "Book List" is a bibliography of earlier books concerning "K-129" with an evaluation of the factual or speculative nature of their contribution to the public's knowledge of this unprecedented event.
If the above does not reveal my unbounded enthusiasm for this book, it is a failure as a review. Others have postured and pretended, promising a unique knowledge of the K-129 and the CIA's salvage effort -- but prior to this book delivered only speculation and distortions. Polmar & White, finally deliver the goods -- they deliver a book demonstrating comprehensive knowledge of this fascinating and heretofore highly-classified incident which occurred at the height of the Cold War.
The CIA Project "Azorian" cost American tax payers about $1.4 billion (2010 dollars), spent between 1968 - 1975. Now for the first time, we can see what our representatives in the "black" communities did with our money, and evaluate for ourselves whether they properly protected our interests during those years of confrontation and threat.
"Project Azorian: The CIA and the Raising of K-129" is the ONLY authoritative unclassified source of reliable information on this event, and should not be read as just another layer of the speculation which has been accumulating since 1975. Azorian (this book) is the bible for FACTUAL data leading to an understanding of these events, and for identifying and measuring the purposeful misdirection, fictions, errors, and speculation which have been published over the past 35 years.
Buy it; read it; and appreciate that finally facts have been separated from the fancy and disinformation which has surrounded the K-129 loss since 1968.
Polmar & White have produced a tour-de-force.
Also highly recommended is the complementary DVD film by Michael White Productions which, in two hours, covers the same story visually: Azorian: The Raising of the K-129


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Naval shiphandling Review

Naval shiphandling
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This is an excellent source for information on Naval ship handling. It is a little dated, but the basic concepts remain the same. It covers everything from working alongside the pier through towing.

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Wolf of the Deep: Raphael Semmes and the Notorious Confederate Raider CSS Alabama Review

Wolf of the Deep: Raphael Semmes and the Notorious Confederate Raider CSS Alabama
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"Wolf of the Deep" is about the most successful commerce raider (read 'privateer') in the history of war at sea. The fact that Raphael Semmes was a captain in the Confederate Navy just adds more to the emotional appeal.
It turns out the Confederacy might have won after all, if it had done more commerce raiding. Semmes' raids alone were enough to cause hundreds of shipowners to sell their cargoes at a loss, or even the ships themselves, to avoid losing them as United States vessels. Semmes caused consternation out of all proportion to being one captain with one ship.
Stephen Fox tells the story with gusto, including lots of pictures, quotes from newspapers of the time, and different perspectives including pro-confederacy and anti-confederacy Brits as well as Americans. The Civil War is where Americans learned to fight with modern technology and transportation logistics - sadly, using each other; but learn they did.
For romance, for military adventure, for political buffoonery, for history: Wolf of the Deep appeals on all levels while telling a right good story. Amazingly, Captain Semmes retired and died in bed after all this brouhaha. You can see a statue dedicated in his honor in Mobile, Alabama.

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Perilous Fight: America's Intrepid War with Britain on the High Seas, 1812-1815 Review

Perilous Fight: America's Intrepid War with Britain on the High Seas, 1812-1815
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I have read quite a few books on the Naval war portion of the War of 1812. Usually, they will concentrate upon the thrilling single ship-to-ship battles of that war, mostly rousing and surprising-for-that-time American victories. This book does cover many of those battles and does so with style and panache, but it also covers the politics behind the War of 1812, and the human stories behind the battles.
For example the author shows us many explicit examples of American sailors being taken and impressed and their horrible mistreatment and even death by torture imposed upon them. "Perilous Fight: America's Intrepid War with Britain on the High Seas, 1812-1815" also covers tales of British naval arrogance and the fact they simply ignored International Law and treaties is capturing American merchant vessels. This- combined with the fact that America's merchant trade was the major source of income in that period- puts a better perspective on the reason for the war.
Excellent use of period sources and quotes, extensively footnoted and researched, this book is a solid scholarly work.
My one quibble is that it does take a bit long to get to the action- there's more than a hundred pages between "The Shores of Tripoli" and the Constitution vs the Guerriere.
And- there's even almost enough maps!
Even if you (like I) have read other books on the naval portion of the War of 1812, this book belongs in your collection.


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Power at Sea, Volume 2: The Breaking Storm, 1919-1945 Review

Power at Sea, Volume 2: The Breaking Storm, 1919-1945
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If you don't know the Battle of the Atlantic from the Battle of Leyte Gulf, you'll want to do a quick review of U.S. naval history during World War II before starting Dr. Rose's second volume in his Power at Sea trilogy. That said, I think that even the casual historian will find this book well worth their while. A revealing look into the rise of the aircraft carrier as the dominate weapon of sea power is only one of the several intriguing topics covered. I was particularly fascinated by the section that described how close the axis nations actually came to winning the war they had so recklessly begun. This book provides an excellent look into the era in which the United States surpassed Great Britain as the greatest sea power in the world.

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Rules of Engagement Review

Rules of Engagement
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an excellent first novel showing a racy, narrative style and a credible storyline with finely-drawn characters. The novel starts out aboard a US carrier, moves to naval intelligence and a several year investigation into espionage, culminating in a chase over many international frontiers into a military denouement in Africa. Good understanding of military matters and inter-service rivalries and a few subtle touches of romance make this a very good read for those who like Clancy, Patrick Robinson, Michael diMercurio and Peter Deutermann

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High Seas: The Naval Passage to an Uncharted World Review

High Seas: The Naval Passage to an Uncharted World
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This book is about change and innovation in military institutions.
Military organizations, especially successful ones, normally tend to resist change. Order reigns, and there are reasons why this is so. In a very real sense, the lives of the individuals who serve in military organizations depend on other military personnel to act predictably, to be where plans say they should be, at the appointed time, doing what their doctrine and training say they should do...As a result, military organizations view change and innovation with great caution. The wrong change, after all, can be fatal, not just for those in uniform but also for their societies.
But sometimes caution leads to stagnation; and failure to adjust to global changes, advances in military technology, or innovations in the conduct of war can lead to the same kind of disasters that cautious bias about change and innovation was supposed to prevent.
I think we are in such a period...Technology pushes beyond the frontiers we took to be inpenetrable limits only a few years ago...In this new era, it is far more dangerous for American military institutions, and for the U.S. Navy in particular, not to change. -- excepts from book's preface

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Admiral William Owens, Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs ofStaff, evaluates military resistance to change and argues that failure to respond to shifting global imperatives can lead to the same disasters caution intends to prevent Acknowledging the life and death qualities of military decisions, Ow

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The Emperor's Sword; Japan vs Russia in the Battle of Tsushima Review

The Emperor's Sword; Japan vs Russia in the Battle of Tsushima
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This a nice short book about the Battle of Tsushima and the Russian defeat in the Russo-Japanese War of 1904-05. There have been other books out there on this war, but the author of this 1969 book actually interviewed some of the survivors of this battle to get a clear picture of what happened during this battle.
Busch lays out the beginning of this war and why Japan decided to go to battle against the Russian Empire. Japan was treated like a child with all the other European empires. She went to war to get some of the spoils of Korea and the Chinese Empire. Russia was arrogant against this upstart nation. When Japan pulled a sneak attack on Port Arthur and bottled up the Russian Pacific Fleet, the stage was set for Russian naval reinforcements for Port Arthur. The relief fleet was huge and outgunned the Japanese, but as the Japanese Admiral Togo said, 100 shots and hits is greater than 100 shots and 1 hit. So the Japanese concentrated on the shots making a hit, and the Russians did not hit much with their guns. The Russians Admirals were humane and brave people, but their people were not experienced enough to score hits.
A nice tale of brave men battling the elements in a battle of two empires. This is a nice book if you can find it.

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