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Naval War College Review Volume 64 Article 21 Number 3 Summer 2011 Summer 2011 Review The .SU . Naval War College Follow this and additional works at: https://digital-commons.usnwc.edu/nwc-review Recommended Citation War College, The .SU . Naval (2011) "Summer 2011 Review," Naval War College Review: Vol. 64 : No. 3 , Article 21. Available at: https://digital-commons.usnwc.edu/nwc-review/vol64/iss3/21 This Full Issue is brought to you for free and open access by the Journals at U.S. Naval War College Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Naval War College Review by an authorized editor of U.S. Naval War College Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. War College: Summer 2011 Review NAVAL WAR C OLLEGE REVIEW NAVAL WAR COLLEGE REVIEW Summer 2011 Volume 64, Number 3 Summer 2011 Summer Published by U.S. Naval War College Digital Commons, 2011 1 NWC_Summer2011New.indd 1 4/21/2011 3:03:19 PM Naval War College Review, Vol. 64 [2011], No. 3, Art. 21 Cover The Claiborne Pell Bridge across the East Passage of Narragansett Bay, as seen from the Naval War College’s Pringle Hall on a June morning in 2010, its lower structure and the bay’s surface, 215 feet below the roadway at its highest point, obscured in fog—which on that day (as is not always the case on the bay) dispersed quickly. The bridge, built in 1968–69 to link the Rhode Island cities of Newport in the east (to the left in the photograph) and James- town, is the longest suspension bridge in New England, at 11,247 feet overall. It was named for Senator Claiborne Pell (1918–2009) of Rhode Island in 1992. Photograph by Joseph Quinn, Jr., of the Naval War College’s Visual Communica- tions Department. Title Page (opposite) Rear Admiral John N. Christenson (right) relieves Rear Admiral James P. Wisecup (left) as President of the Naval War College in a change of command ceremony held in Spruance Auditorium on 30 March 2011. The Chief of Naval Operations, Admiral Gary Roughead, is in the center. Rear Admiral Wisecup left Newport to assume, in Washington, D.C., on 18 April, duties as Naval Inspector General, in the grade of vice admiral. U.S. Navy photograph by MCC (AW/NAC) Robert Inverso, USN. https://digital-commons.usnwc.edu/nwc-review/vol64/iss3/21 2 NWC_Summer2011New.indd 2 4/21/2011 3:03:25 PM Color profile: Disabled Composite Default screen War College: Summer 2011 Review NAVALWAR COLLEGE REVIEW Summer 2011 Volume 64, Number 3 NAVALWAR COLLEGE PRESS 686 Cushing Road Newport, RI 02841-1207 Published by U.S. Naval War College Digital Commons, 2011 3 NWC_2011SummerReview.ps \\data1\john.lanzieri.ctr$\msdata\Desktop\NavalWarCollege\NWC_2011SummerReview\NWC_2011SummerReview.vp Tuesday, April 19, 2011 11:06:39 AM Color profile: Disabled Composite Default screen Naval War College Review, Vol. 64 [2011], No. 3, Art. 21 NAVAL WAR COLLEGE PRESS ADVISORY BOARD PRESIDENT, NAVAL WAR COLLEGE Adam Bellow Rear Adm. James P. Wisecup, USN Capt. Wayne P. Hughes, USN (Ret.) PROVOST Jeffrey Kline Amb. Mary Ann Peters Gale A. Mattox Robert A. Silano DEAN OF NAVAL WARFARE STUDIES Marin Strmecki Robert C. Rubel Dov S. Zakheim NAVAL WAR COLLEGE PRESS Carnes Lord, Editor NAVAL WAR COLLEGE REVIEW EDITORIAL BOARD Pelham G. Boyer, Managing Editor Donald Chisholm Phyllis P. Winkler, Book Review Editor Audrey Kurth Cronin Lori A. Almeida, Secretary and Circulation Manager Peter Dombrowski Frank Uhlig, Jr., Editor Emeritus Stephen Downes-Martin Col. Theodore L. Gatchel, USMC (Ret.) Naval War College Review James R. Holmes Code 32, Naval War College Capt. Dennis Mandsager, JAGC, USN (Ret.) 686 Cushing Rd., Newport, RI 02841-1207 William C. Martel Fax: 401.841.1071 Col. Mackubin Owens, USMC (Ret.) DSN exchange, all lines: 841 Cdr. Derek S. Reveron, USN Website: www.usnwc.edu/press Capt. Peter M. Swartz, USN (Ret.) http://twitter.com/NavalWarCollege Cdr. David Teska, USCGR Editor, Circulation, or Business Scott C. Truver 401.841.2236 James J. Wirtz [email protected] Managing Editor 401.841.4552 [email protected] Newport Papers, Books [email protected] Essays and Book Reviews 401.841.6584 [email protected] Other Naval War College Offices 401.841.3089 https://digital-commons.usnwc.edu/nwc-review/vol64/iss3/21 4 NWC_2011SummerReview.ps \\data1\john.lanzieri.ctr$\msdata\Desktop\NavalWarCollege\NWC_2011SummerReview\NWC_2011SummerReview.vp Tuesday, April 19, 2011 11:14:37 AM Color profile: Disabled Composite Default screen War College: Summer 2011 Review The Naval War College Review was established in 1948 as a forum for discussion of public policy matters of interest to the maritime services. The thoughts and opinions expressed in this publication are those of the authors and are not necessarily those of the U.S. government, the U.S. Navy Department, or the Naval War College. The journal is published quarterly. Distribution is limited generally to commands and activities of the U.S. Navy, Marine Corps, and Coast Guard; regular and reserve officers of U.S. services; foreign officers and civilians having a present or previous affiliation with the Naval War College; selected U.S. government officials and agen- cies; and selected U.S. and international libraries, research centers, publications, and educational institutions. Contributors Please request the standard contributors’ guidance from the managing editor or access it online before submitting manuscripts. The Naval War College Review nei- ther offers nor makes compensation for articles or book reviews, and it assumes no responsibility for the return of manuscripts, although every effort is made to return those not accepted. In submitting work, the sender warrants that it is original, that it is the sender’s property, and that neither it nor a similar work by the sender has been accepted or is under consideration elsewhere. Permissions Reproduction and reprinting are subject to the Copyright Act of 1976 and appli- cable treaties of the United States. To obtain permission to reproduce material bearing a copyright notice, or to reproduce any material for commercial pur- poses, contact the editor for each use. Material not bearing a copyright notice may be freely reproduced for academic or other noncommercial use; however, it is requested that the author and Naval War College Review be credited and that the editor be informed. Periodicals postage paid at Newport, R.I. POSTMASTERS, send address changes to: Naval War College Review, Code 32S, Naval War College, 686 Cushing Rd., Newport, R.I. 02841-1207. ISSN 0028-1484 Published by U.S. Naval War College Digital Commons, 2011 5 NWC_2011SummerReview.ps \\data1\john.lanzieri.ctr$\msdata\Desktop\NavalWarCollege\NWC_2011SummerReview\NWC_2011SummerReview.vp Tuesday, April 19, 2011 11:14:37 AM Color profile: Disabled Composite Default screen Naval War College Review, Vol. 64 [2011], No. 3, Art. 21 https://digital-commons.usnwc.edu/nwc-review/vol64/iss3/21 6 NWC_2011SummerReview.ps \\data1\john.lanzieri.ctr$\msdata\Desktop\NavalWarCollege\NWC_2011SummerReview\NWC_2011SummerReview.vp Tuesday, April 19, 2011 11:14:47 AM Color profile: Disabled Composite Default screen War College: Summer 2011 Review CONTENTS From the Editors. 3 President’s Forum . 7 From the Sea PLA Doctrine and the Employment of Sea-Based Airpower. 11 Daniel J. Kostecka China’s navy currently possesses only a modest long-range force-projection capability. But between now and 2020, aircraft carriers and new amphibious assault ships will give it a robust capacity for force projection in East Asia and smaller missions farther afield—especially for, or in support of, nontraditional security operations. A New Carrier Race? Strategy, Force Planning, and JS Hyuga . 31 Vice Admiral Yoji Koda, Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force (Retired) The recently commissioned JS Hyuga—a multirole, through-deck, helicopter-carrying destroyer— is the product of a Japanese naval concept that originated in the early postwar years, in the framework of the new constitution and the U.S.-Japanese alliance. The Great Green Fleet The U.S. Navy and Fossil-Fuel Alternatives . 61 Lieutenant Alaina M. Chambers, U.S. Navy, and Steve A. Yetiv It is apparent that alternative fuels and energy technology will become increasingly necessary with respect to the economy, the environment, and national security. The U.S. Navy, for its own reasons (and perhaps surprisingly), is well placed to take a leading position in this direction—and is already doing so. The “Other” Law of the Sea . 78 Commander Andrew J. Norris, U.S. Coast Guard The 1982 UN Convention on the Law of the Sea established a framework for legal governance of the world’s oceans and codified important principles. The vital details, however, are filled in by an array of widely accepted and broadly effective international treaties and mechanisms—the “other” law of the sea. Six Amazing Years RAGs, NATOPS, and More . 98 Vice Admiral Robert F. Dunn, U.S. Navy (Retired) In only six years—1958–63, an era when the Navy operated some of the most challenging new aircraft in its history—the service cut its major-mishap rate in more than half. How? Published by U.S. Naval War College Digital Commons, 2011 7 NWC_2011SummerReview_5-6.ps \\data1\john.lanzieri.ctr$\msdata\Desktop\NavalWarCollege\NWC_2011SummerReview\NWC_2011SummerReview.vp Tuesday, April 19, 2011 1:34:53 PM Color profile: Disabled Composite Default screen 2 NAVAL WARNaval COLLEGE War REVIEW College Review, Vol. 64 [2011], No. 3, Art. 21 Why Wargaming Works . 111 Peter P. Perla and ED McGrady The particulars of individual wargames are important, yet there is an undercurrent of something less tangible than facts or models that affects fundamentally the ability of a game to succeed—and to transform its participants into decision makers better able to face real-world challenges.