Desert Storm at Sea: What the Navy Really Did

Desert Storm at Sea: What the Navy Really Did

by Marvin Pokrant
Desert Storm at Sea: What the Navy Really Did

Desert Storm at Sea: What the Navy Really Did

by Marvin Pokrant

Hardcover

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Overview

Desert Storm was the largest naval operation since World War II. Although naval forces did not play the central role, they fulfilled an important function throughout the operation, facing many formidable challenges and considerable risk. This book provides a close examination of the problems encountered by the Navy, both in the military situation and in dealing with the other services, and the decisions made to address these issues. While interservice rivalries sometimes intruded at higher levels, jointness at the tactical level often led to effective combined-arms operations.

Despite the information revolution and improvements in technology, the Fog of War still obscured the battlefield and affected nearly all decisions. This study offers page-turbaning action, such as SEAL activity and combat search and rescue missions, as well as the exciting and dangerous surface operations that gained sea control of the northern Persian Gulf. Using primary sources such as interviews and many documents cleared only recently for public release, the author covers the relations between General Schwarzkopf and Vice Admirals Mauz and Arthur; the major contribution of Tomahawk cruise missiles to the first wave of attacks on Baghdad; the controversial use of aircraft carriers in the Gulf; as well as the Navy's possible role in the event of an amphibious assault into Kuwait. Those preparing to fight in future naval actions will learn much from this detailed analysis.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780313310249
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 07/30/1999
Series: Contributions in Military Studies , #175
Pages: 352
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.81(d)
Lexile: 1300L (what's this?)

About the Author

MARVIN POKRANT has been a military operations research analyst for more than 20 years./e After joining the Center for Naval Analyses, he had field tours with Commander-in-Chief Pacific Fleet, Commander Third Fleet, and Commander Seventh Fleet. After Desert Storm, Dr. Pokrant coordinated CNA's reconstruction of Desert Shield and Desert Storm with the Seventh Fleet staff. Later, as Director of CNA's Fleet Tactics and Capabilities Program from 1992 to 1994, he oversaw many follow-on analyses of issues raised during Desert Storm. Dr. Pokrant is now retired.

Table of Contents

Preface
Storm at Sea
Prologue
Strike Operations: 17-18 January
Strike Operations: 19 January-5 February
Persian Gulf Air-Control Operations
Sea-Control Operations I
Sea-Control Operations II
Amphibious Plans for Desert Saber
Decision on Desert Saber
Preparing the Battlefield
Mine Countermeasures Operations
Naval Operations during the Ground War
Prisoners of War
After the Storm: Postwar Operations
Observations
Observations on Command and Control
Observations on Amphibious Operations
Observations on Mine Countermeasures
Observations on Strike Warfare
Observations on Air Defense
Observations on Maritime Interception Operations
Observations on JFACC
Observations on Jointness
What Could the Navy Do to Be More Joint?
Bibliography
Index

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