The Navy as a Fighting Machine
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Bradley A. Fiske
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Title: The Navy as a Fighting Machine
Author: Bradley A. Fiske
Release Date: January 18, 2006 [eBook #17547]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE NAVY
AS A FIGHTING MACHINE***
E-text prepared by Robert J. Hall
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THE NAVY AS A FIGHTING MACHINE
by
REAR ADMIRAL BRADLEY A. FISKE U. S. Navy
Former Aid for Operations of the Fleet; President of the U. S. Naval
Institute; Gold Medallist of the U. S. Naval Institute and The Franklin
Institute of Pennsylvania
Author of "Electricity in Theory and Practice," "War Time in Manila,"
Etc.
With Map
PREFACE
What is the navy for?
Of what parts should it be composed?
What principles should be followed in designing, preparing, and
operating it in order to get the maximum return for the money
expended?
To answer these questions clearly and without technical language is the
object of the book.
BRADLEY A. FISKE.
U. S. NAVAL WAR COLLEGE, NEWPORT, R. I., September 3,
1916.
CONTENTS
PART I
GENERAL CONSIDERATIONS
CHAPTER I.
WAR AND THE NATIONS II. NAVAL A, B, C III. NAVAL POWER
IV. NAVAL PREPAREDNESS V. NAVAL DEFENSE VI. NAVAL
POLICY
PART II
NAVAL STRATEGY
VII. GENERAL PRINCIPLES VIII. DESIGNING THE MACHINE IX.
PREPARING THE ACTIVE FLEET X. RESERVES AND SHORE
STATIONS XI. NAVAL BASES XII. OPERATING THE MACHINE
STRATEGIC MAP OF THE ATLANTIC AND PACIFIC OCEANS
*** Chapters III and VII were published originally in _The U. S. Naval
Institute; chapters I, II, IV, V, and VII in The North American Review_.
PART I
GENERAL CONSIDERATIONS
CHAPTER I
WAR AND THE NATIONS
Because the question is widely discussed, whether peace throughout the
world may be attained by the friendly co-operation of many nations,
and because a nation's attitude toward this question may determine its
future prosperity or ruin, it may be well to note what has been the trend
of the nations hitherto, and whether any forces exist that may
reasonably be expected to change that trend. We may then be able to
induce from facts the law which that trend obeys, and make a
reasonable deduction as to whether or not the world is moving toward
peace. If we do this we shall follow the inductive method of modern
science, and avoid the error (with its perilous results) of first assuming
the law and then deducing conclusions from it.
Men have always been divided into organizations, the first organization
being the family. As time went on families were formed into tribes, for
self-protection. The underlying cause for the organization was always a
desire for strength; sometimes for defense, sometimes for offense,
usually for both.
At times tribes joined in alliance with other tribes to attain a common
end, the alliance being brought about by peaceful agreement, and
usually ceasing after the end had been attained, or missed, or when
tribal jealousies forbade further common effort. Sometimes tribes
joined to form one larger tribe; the union being either forced on a
weaker by a stronger tribe, or caused by a desire to secure a strength
greater and more lasting than mere alliance can insure.
In the same way, and apparently according to similar laws, sovereign
states or nations were formed from tribes; and in later years, by the
union of separate states. The states or nations have become larger and
larger as time has gone on; greater numbers, not only of people but of
peoples, living in the same general localities and having hereditary ties,
joining to form a nation.
Though the forms of government of these states or nations are
numerous, and though the conceptions of people as to the purposes and
functions of the state vary greatly, we find that one characteristic of a
state has always prevailed among all the states and nations of the
world--the existence of an armed military force, placed under the
control of its government; the purpose of this armed force being to
enable the government not only to carry on its administration of
internal matters, but also to exert itself externally against the armed
force of another state.
This armed force has been a prominent factor in the life of every
sovereign state and independent tribe, from history's beginning, and is
no less a factor now.
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