Recent challenges to US maritime predominance suggests a return to great power competition at sea, and this new volume looks at how navies in previous eras of multipolarity grappled with similar challenges.
The book follows the theme of multipolarity by analysing a wide range of historical and geographical case studies, thereby maintaining the focus of both its historical analysis and its policy implications. It begins by looking at the evolution of French naval policy from Louis XIV through to the end of the nineteenth century. It then examines how the British responded to multipolar threat environments, convoys, the challenges of demobilization, and the persistence of British naval power in the interwar period. There are also contributions regarding Japan’s turn away from the sea, the Italian navy, and multipolarity in the Arctic. This volume also addresses the regional and global distribution of forces; trade and communication protection; arms races; the emergence of naval challengers; fleet design; logistics; technology; civil-naval relations; and grand strategy, past, present, and future.
This book will be of much interest to students of naval history, strategic studies and international relations history, as well as senior naval officers.
Author(s): Paul Kennedy, Evan Wilson
Series: Cass Series: Naval Policy and History
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2020
Language: English
Pages: 278
City: Abingdon
Contents
Figures
Tables
Contributors
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1 French sea power in the Utrecht era “Balance of power” and the strategic context of Louis XIV’s navy
2 “A brilliant second” France as a naval great power
3 British North Atlantic convoys, 1812–14, and the subsequent rejection of the convoy system
4 The limits of naval power Britain after 1815
5 David Lloyd George and the contest for naval mastery: The American challenge
6 Japan’s transition from a maritime to a continental security paradigm, 1928–41
7 A rising power facing multipolarity: Italian naval policy and strategy in the age of fascism
8 Managed decline in an age of multipolarity: The case of the Royal Navy in the interwar period
9 The rise and fall of a multipolar naval order, 1936 to 1945
10 Danish naval evolution in the Arctic: Developments through the unipolar moment
11 Multipolarity, navies, and the post-Cold War world
12 China in a multipolar world
Afterword: Reflections on the Great War at sea
Index