An edition of Mayday (2013)

Mayday

the decline of American Naval supremacy

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Last edited by ImportBot
September 18, 2021 | History
An edition of Mayday (2013)

Mayday

the decline of American Naval supremacy

  • 2.00 ·
  • 1 Rating
  • 0 Want to read
  • 0 Currently reading
  • 1 Have read

As with other powerful nations throughout history, maritime supremacy has been the key to America's rise to superpower status and the relative peace of the postwar era. Over the past two decades, however, while Washington has been preoccupied with land wars in the Middle East and targeted drone-centric operations against emerging terrorist threats, the United States Navy's combat fleet has dwindled to historic lows--the smallest since before World War I. At the same time, rival nations such as China have increased the size of their navies significantly and at an extraordinary rate. Within a matter of years or even months, China will likely have the ability to deny or substantially curtail the U.S. Navy's ability to operate in the Pacific and to project power in Asia, which could have drastic consequences for the world economy. --

Publish Date
Publisher
Overlook Press
Language
English
Pages
348

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Previews available in: English

Edition Availability
Cover of: Mayday
Mayday: The Decline of American Naval Supremacy
2014, ABRAMS (Ignition)
in English
Cover of: Mayday
Mayday: the decline of American Naval supremacy
2014, Overlook Press
in English
Cover of: Mayday
Mayday: the decline of American naval supremacy
2013, Overlook Duckworth
in English

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Book Details


Table of Contents

American seapower in distress
Alfred Thayer Mahan : seapower as an instrument of democratic expansion
The roots of American seapower
The future of American seapower
America adrift
China and the coming threats to dominance
What is lost can never be regained
Can America still manufacture its own weapons?
To be a great power or not
Changing American maritime strategy.

Edition Notes

This edition originally published: New York : The Overlook Press, 2014.

"Featuring a new afterword"--Cover.

Includes bibliographical references (pages 315-335) and index.

Published in
New York

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
359.00973
Library of Congress
VA58.4 .C76 2014

The Physical Object

Pagination
348 pages
Number of pages
348

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL31969554M
Internet Archive
maydaydeclineofa0000crop_q4k7
ISBN 10
1468308289
ISBN 13
9781468308280
OCLC/WorldCat
852221821

Work Description

In this alarming defense of American seapower, Navy insider Seth Cropsey blows the whistle on America's weakening naval might in the twenty-first century. As with other powerful nations throughout history, maritime supremacy has been the key to America's rise to superpower status and the relative peace of the postwar era. Over the past two decades, however, while Washington has been preoccupied with land wars and targeted drone-centric operations, the United States Navy's combat fleet has dwindled to historic lows--the smallest since before World War I. At the same time, rival nations such as China have increased the size of their navies at an extraordinary rate. As Cropsey convincingly argues, the precipitous decline of the U.S. as a great sea power, due in large part to budget cuts, will have profound consequences sooner than we might think.--From publisher description.

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September 18, 2021 Edited by ImportBot import existing book
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