The Rise of American Naval Power, 1776-1918Princeton University Press, 1944 - 404 من الصفحات |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 1-3 من 59
الصفحة 66
... attack Canada . He had no doubt such an attack would succeed . But how , he inquired , could we continue the war after conquering Canada , unless we had a naval force upon the high seas ? Otherwise we should " suffer the evils of war ...
... attack Canada . He had no doubt such an attack would succeed . But how , he inquired , could we continue the war after conquering Canada , unless we had a naval force upon the high seas ? Otherwise we should " suffer the evils of war ...
الصفحة 70
... attack the most vulnerable points . While our vessels , therefore , must be scattered , from the neces- sity of the case , and continually liable to be attacked by a su- perior force , the enemy will separate , or not , as inducements ...
... attack the most vulnerable points . While our vessels , therefore , must be scattered , from the neces- sity of the case , and continually liable to be attacked by a su- perior force , the enemy will separate , or not , as inducements ...
الصفحة 327
... attack from the enemy's torpedocraft . . . . Their lines of communication , after they get to the point 7,000 miles away , are constantly liable to interruption and would inevitably be interrupted ; and yet they depend on those lines ...
... attack from the enemy's torpedocraft . . . . Their lines of communication , after they get to the point 7,000 miles away , are constantly liable to interruption and would inevitably be interrupted ; and yet they depend on those lines ...
المحتوى
Chart and Compass | 1 |
Sea Power and American Independence 1776 | 7 |
Independence Without Sea Power 17831789 | 16 |
حقوق النشر | |
17 من الأقسام الأخرى غير ظاهرة
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
44 Cong A. T. Mahan aggression American naval policy American naval power annual armored armored cruisers Army Atlantic attack authorized battle battleships bill blockade Britain building Bureau of Navigation capital ships Captain Chap coast command commerce commerce raiding Congress congressional continental crisis cruisers cruising debate defense Democratic destroyers enemy enemy's European Federalist fighting fleet foreign frigates German gunboats guns harbor hostile ibid Ironclad Warship ironclads Jeffersonian Literary Digest Mahan maritime ment merchant military Naval Administration Naval Affairs naval architecture naval development naval expansion naval force naval program Navy Department Navy Dept Navy Yearbook Navy's ocean officers operations oversea Pacific Paullin peace political ports preparedness preparedness movement President Record Vol Rept Republican Roosevelt sails Sea Power sea-going seaboard Secretary Senate Sess Sims squadrons Steam Navy strategic struggle submarine Theodore Roosevelt tion U-boats United States Navy vessels voted warships Western Wilson