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Status:
Available0.0
0 reviewsISBN 10: 0714655392
ISBN 13: 9780203495155
Author: Greg Kennedy
1: ‘Wee-ah-wee’?: Britain At Weihaiwei, 1898–1930
‘Cartographic Consolation’: The acquisition of Weihaiwei
‘Strategically too isolated’: Britain at Weihaiwei
‘Keeping Its Head above Water’: The retention of Weihaiwei
Notes
2: The Idea of Naval Imperialism: the China Squadron and the Boxer Uprising
I
II
III
IV
Notes
3: ‘Unbroken Thread’: Japan. Maritime Power and British Imperial Defence, 1920–32
Notes
4: What Worth the Americans? the British Strategic Foreign Policy-making Elite’s view of American Maritime power in the far East, 1933–1941
The Treasury
The Admiralty
The Foreign Office
Notes
5: ‘Looking Skyward from below the Waves’: Admiral Tom Phillips and the Loss of the Prince of Wales and the Repulse
The sinking of force ‘Z’
Looking Skyward from below the Waves
Inter-war rivalries
Royal Navy Tactical Instructions for an Enemy Air Attack at Sea
RAF after-action analysis
Who is to Blame for Britain’s greatest Naval Disaster in two World Wars?
Notes
6: ‘Light two Lanterns, the British are coming by Sea’: Royal Navy Participation in the Pacific 1944–1945
Notes
7: The Royal Navy in Korea: Replenishment and Sustainability
Post-war transition
Korean operations
Analysis
Summary
Notes
8: The Royal Navy, Expeditionary Operations and the end of Empire, 1956–75
The Future role of the Navy
The Royal Marines
Protecting British Interests Overseas
The End of Empire
Conclusion
Notes
9: The Royal Navy and Confrontation, 1963–66
The origins of Confrontation
Confrontation and Naval Power
The Royal Navy in Confrontation
Operations in East Malaysia
Naval diplomacy
The Royal Navy and British Contingency Plans
The burden of Confrontation
Conclusions
Notes
10: The British Naval Role East Of Suez: An Australian Perspective
Australian Post-war Defence Policy and the Higher Defence Organization
The future navy
Strategic and operational planning
The FESR and Malayan Emergency
Indonesia and Confrontation
Britain’s Rundown and Withdrawal
Conclusions
Notes
11: The Return to Globalism: the Royal Navy east of Suez, 1975–2003
Sounding the Retreat
Second Thoughts in the 1970s: the Incomplete Retreat
Margaret Thatcher, the Navy and the east-of-Suez Role
Reviving commitments in the 1980s
Continuing constraints in the Thatcher/Major era
The 1990s: accelerating interest in a wider world
british suez disaster
british suez canal war
britain suez crisis
great britain taking control of the suez canal
britain east of suez
Tags: Greg Kennedy, British Maritime, Strategy East