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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Corbin WilliamsonPublisher: University Press of Kansas Imprint: University Press of Kansas Dimensions: Width: 16.00cm , Height: 3.30cm , Length: 23.60cm Weight: 0.695kg ISBN: 9780700629787ISBN 10: 0700629785 Pages: 360 Publication Date: 30 August 2020 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsProvides key insights into the navies and naval policy of Great Britain, Canada, and Australia. Williamson's history from the middle should stimulate similar Cold War research on alliances for other periods.--Journal of Military HistoryAn excellent book for anyone interested in how navies prepare for war and also those interested in how engagement works.--New York Military Affairs Symposium Review Corbin Williamson's book not only is a strongly written and excellently researched account but also fills a major chronological gap in the multinational history of U.S. and Allied navies during the early Cold War. Williamson's book should foster additional studies on the topic for this time period. In addition, his work could be a policy blueprint for the United States and its allies today in terms of navy-to-navy contact and operations, especially given budgetary and other restraints on those navies in meeting the threats of the early twenty-first century.--Hal M. Friedman, professor of modern history, Henry Ford College This original analysis of postwar naval cooperation among the United States, Australia, Britain, and Canada adds to a growing body of new Cold War global scholarship. Drawing upon political, strategic, operational, and technological factors, Corbin Williamson's insightful and nuanced work offers readers a refreshing interpretation of American and Commonwealth naval cooperation. Williamson challenges the traditional picture of a U.S. navy that turned its back on wartime friends, showing clearly how perceptions of a future Soviet submarine threat caused particular high-ranking officers to encourage linkages among the forces. A must-read for historians of twentieth-century navies and for scholars of the Cold War.--Isabel Campbell, senior historian, Directorate of History and Heritage, National Defence Headquarters, Ottawa, Canada Following World War I, the U.S. Navy's links to Britain's Royal Navy withered away. After the next global conflict, the challenge of Soviet submarines made permanent America's maritime friendships. The U.S. Navy and Its Cold War Alliances illuminates the web of these links built between the U.S. Navy and the British, Canadian, and Australian navies, and it is highly recommended.--Admiral (ret.) James Stavridis, U.S. Navy Corbin Williamson has written a carefully reasoned and articulate account of a critical period in both naval and alliance history. This work, built on a combination of prodigious research across three continents, provides outstanding insights into a critical period in the foundation of the U.S. global alliance system, which remains the bedrock of U.S. global security posture today. It will be the go-to text on understanding the U.S. Navy's engagement with its key western alliance partners in the immediate postwar era.--Peter J. Dean, winner of the Jakobczak Memorial Book Award and author of MacArthur's Coalition: US and Australian Military Operations in the Southwest Pacific Area, 1942-1945 Corbin Williamson's book not only is a strongly written and excellently researched account but also fills a major chronological gap in the multinational history of U.S. and Allied navies during the early Cold War. Williamson's book should foster additional studies on the topic for this time period. In addition, his work could be a policy blueprint for the United States and its allies today in terms of navy-to-navy contact and operations, especially given budgetary and other restraints on those navies in meeting the threats of the early twenty-first century. - Hal M. Friedman, professor of modern history, Henry Ford College This original analysis of postwar naval cooperation among the United States, Australia, Britain, and Canada adds to a growing body of new Cold War global scholarship. Drawing upon political, strategic, operational, and technological factors, Corbin Williamson's insightful and nuanced work offers readers a refreshing interpretation of American and Commonwealth naval cooperation. Williamson challenges the traditional picture of a U.S. navy that turned its back on wartime friends, showing clearly how perceptions of a future Soviet submarine threat caused particular high-ranking officers to encourage linkages among the forces. A must-read for historians of twentieth-century navies and for scholars of the Cold War. - Isabel Campbell, senior historian, Directorate of History and Heritage, National Defence Headquarters, Ottawa, Canada Following World War I, the U.S. Navy's links to Britain's Royal Navy withered away. After the next global conflict, the challenge of Soviet submarines made permanent America's maritime friendships. The U.S. Navy and Its Cold War Alliances illuminates the web of these links built between the U.S. Navy and the British, Canadian, and Australian navies, and it is highly recommended. - Admiral (ret.) James Stavridis, U.S. Navy "Corbin Williamson's book not only is a strongly written and excellently researched account but also fills a major chronological gap in the multinational history of U.S. and Allied navies during the early Cold War. Williamson's book should foster additional studies on the topic for this time period. In addition, his work could be a policy blueprint for the United States and its allies today in terms of navy-to-navy contact and operations, especially given budgetary and other restraints on those navies in meeting the threats of the early twenty-first century."""" - Hal M. Friedman, professor of modern history, Henry Ford College """"This original analysis of postwar naval cooperation among the United States, Australia, Britain, and Canada adds to a growing body of new Cold War global scholarship. Drawing upon political, strategic, operational, and technological factors, Corbin Williamson's insightful and nuanced work offers readers a refreshing interpretation of American and Commonwealth naval cooperation. Williamson challenges the traditional picture of a U.S. navy that turned its back on wartime friends, showing clearly how perceptions of a future Soviet submarine threat caused particular high-ranking officers to encourage linkages among the forces. A must-read for historians of twentieth-century navies and for scholars of the Cold War."""" - Isabel Campbell, senior historian, Directorate of History and Heritage, National Defence Headquarters, Ottawa, Canada """"Following World War I, the U.S. Navy's links to Britain's Royal Navy withered away. After the next global conflict, the challenge of Soviet submarines made permanent America's maritime friendships. The U.S. Navy and Its Cold War Alliances illuminates the web of these links built between the U.S. Navy and the British, Canadian, and Australian navies, and it is highly recommended."""" - Admiral (ret.) James Stavridis, U.S. Navy" Corbin Williamson's book not only is a strongly written and excellently researched account but also fills a major chronological gap in the multinational history of U.S. and Allied navies during the early Cold War. Williamson's book should foster additional studies on the topic for this time period. In addition, his work could be a policy blueprint for the United States and its allies today in terms of navy-to-navy contact and operations, especially given budgetary and other restraints on those navies in meeting the threats of the early twenty-first century."""" - Hal M. Friedman, professor of modern history, Henry Ford College """"This original analysis of postwar naval cooperation among the United States, Australia, Britain, and Canada adds to a growing body of new Cold War global scholarship. Drawing upon political, strategic, operational, and technological factors, Corbin Williamson's insightful and nuanced work offers readers a refreshing interpretation of American and Commonwealth naval cooperation. Williamson challenges the traditional picture of a U.S. navy that turned its back on wartime friends, showing clearly how perceptions of a future Soviet submarine threat caused particular high-ranking officers to encourage linkages among the forces. A must-read for historians of twentieth-century navies and for scholars of the Cold War."""" - Isabel Campbell, senior historian, Directorate of History and Heritage, National Defence Headquarters, Ottawa, Canada """"Following World War I, the U.S. Navy's links to Britain's Royal Navy withered away. After the next global conflict, the challenge of Soviet submarines made permanent America's maritime friendships. The U.S. Navy and Its Cold War Alliances illuminates the web of these links built between the U.S. Navy and the British, Canadian, and Australian navies, and it is highly recommended."""" - Admiral (ret.) James Stavridis, U.S. Navy Author InformationCorbin Williamson is assistant professor of strategy, Air War College, Montgomery, Alabama. His work has appeared in numerous publications, including books such as The Culture of Military Organizations and The Vietnam War in Popular Culture and periodicals such as the International Journal of Naval History, Diplomatic History, and Joint Force Quarterly. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |