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Naval Institute Press Spring 2015 Spring NAVAL INSTITUTE PRESS 40% Off for U.S. Naval Institute Members CONTENTS U.S. NAVAL INSTITUTE 1 New Publications MEMBER DISCOUNT NOW 21 Recent Releases 26 History of United States Naval 40% OFF Operations in World War II List Price on 27 Revolutionary War 27 War of 1812 All New Books in the 27 Civil War Naval Institute Press 28 World War I & the New Century 27 Spring 2015 Catalog World War II Offer valid through June 1, 2015 33 Cold War 33 Vietnam Become a Member of the 34 Iraq & Afghanistan U.S. Naval Institute NOW to receive 34 Member Discounts on ALL Books! Age of Sail 34 Aviation Join online at www.usni.org/join or Call 800-233-8764 35 Battleships, Destroyers, & More 36 Biography & Memoir Founded in 1873, the U.S. NAVAL INSTITUTE is the 38 Award Winners independent forum for those who dare to read, think, 39 China and the Asia-Pacific speak, and write in order to advance the professional, 39 literary, and scientific understanding of sea power Current Affairs and other issues critical to national defense. Your 39 Espionage & Intelligence 40 membership ensures that the Naval Institute carries Fiction on its vital mission as The Independent Forum of the 40 General Military and Naval History Sea Services – a place where free and independent 42 Leadership debate may flourish. 42 Royal Navy 42 Weapons and Strategy 42 Professional Reading List 42 Blue & Gold Professional Library 44 USMC Reading List 45 Scarlet & Gold Professional Library 45 Cover image: The guided missile destroyer USS Preble (DDG 88) Navy Reading Program steams into the sunset as storm clouds set in during exercise 46 Veterans Affairs Valiant Shield 2007. Preble is part of the John C. Stennis Carrier 46 Strike Group. The John C. Stennis, Kitty Hawk and Nimitz Carrier Modeling Strike Groups are participating in Valiant Shield 2007, the largest 46 Navigation & Seamanship joint exercise in recent history. Held in the Guam operating 48 area, the exercise includes 30 ships, more than 280 aircraft New in Paperback, Back in Print and more than 20,000 service members from the Navy, Air 50 Index Force, Marine Corps, and Coast Guard. U.S. Navy photo by Mass 56 Communication Specialist 2nd Class Ron Reeves (RELEASED) Ordering Information Like Us On & Follow Us On @USNIBooks THE BALTIMORE SABOTAGE WWW.NIP.ORG TO ORDER CALL 1-800-233-8764 OR GO ONLINE AT // PUBLICATIONS NEW CELL German Agents, American Traitors, and the U-boat Deutschland during World War I By Dwight R. Messimer By the summer of 1915 Germany was faced with two major problems in fighting World War I: how to break the British blockade and how to stop or seriously disrupt the British supply line across the Atlantic. The solution to the former was to find a way over, through, or under it. Aircraft in those days were too primitive, too short range, and too underpowered to accomplish this, and Germany lacked the naval strength to force a passage through the blockade. But if Germany could build a fleet of cargo U-boats that were large enough to carry meaningful loads and had the range to make a round trip between Germany and the United States without refueling, the blockade might be successfully broken. Since the German navy could not cut Britain’s supply line to America, another answer lay in sabotaging munitions factories, depots, and ships, as well as infecting horses and mules at the western end of the supply line. German agents, with American sympathizers, successfully carried out more than fifty attacks involving fires and explosions and spread anthrax and glanders on the East Coast before America’s entry into the war on 6 April 1917. Breaking the blockade with a fleet of cargo U-boats provided the lowest risk of drawing � MARCH America into the war; at the same time, sabotage 280 pp., 33 b/w photos, 9 maps, 6 1/8” x 9 1/4” was incompatible with Germany’s diplomatic goal Hardcover: $35.95 ISBN: 978-1-59114-184-6 of keeping the United States out of the war. The two History • WWI solutions were very different, but the fact that both campaigns were run by intelligence agencies—the Etappendienst (navy) and the Geheimdienst (army), through the agency of one man, Paul Hilken, in one American city, Baltimore, make them inseparable. Those solutions created the dichotomy that produced the U-boat Deutschland and the Baltimore Sabotage Cell. Here, Messimer provides the first study of the degree to which U.S. citizens were enlisted in Germany’s sabotage operations and debunks many myths that surround the Deutschland. DWIGHT R. MESSIMER is a U.S. Army veteran and former lecturer in history at California State University–San Jose. He is the author of Find and Destroy: Antisubmarine Warfare in World War I and Verschollen: World War I U-boat Losses. He resides in Northern California. 1 NEW PUBLICATIONS � FEBRUARY �▲ SEPTEMBER MARCH 176 pp., 1 b/w line drawing, 6” x 9” 176224 pp., 1113 b/w photos, 15” illustration, x 8” Paperback: $21.95 6”Paperback: x 9” $19.95 ISBN: 978-1-61251-810-7 Paperback:ISBN: 978-1-59114-185-3 $21.95 History • Naval AutobiographyISBN: 978-1-61251-807-7 • Naval History • Naval 21ST CENTURY SIMS 21ST CENTURY ELLIS Innovation, Education, and Leadership for the Modern Era Operational Art and Strategic Prophecy for the Modern Era Edited by Benjamin F. Armstrong Edited by B. A. Friedman For more than two decades William S. Sims was at the For years, the Marine Corps has touted the prescience of Lt. forefront of naval affairs. From the revolution in naval Col. “Pete” Ellis, USMC, who predicted in 1921 that the gunnery to his development of torpedo boat and destroyer United States would fight Japan and how the Pacific Theater operations, he was a central figure in preparing the U.S. Navy would be won. Now the works of the “amphibious prophet” for World War I. During the war, he served as the senior are collected together for the first time. Included are Ellis’ naval commander in Europe and was instrumental in the essays on naval and amphibious operations that the U.S. Navy establishment of the convoy system. Following the war his and Marine Corps would use to win the war against Imperial leadership as president of the Naval War College established Japan, as well as his articles about counterinsurgency and the foundation of the creative and innovative Navy that conventional war based on his experiences in the Philippines developed the operating concepts for submarines and aircraft and in Europe during World War I. As the United States carriers leading up to World War II. Despite his dramatic focuses on the Pacific once again, Friedman presents Ellis’ impact on the U.S. Navy, Sims’ books and articles are often ideas as a case study to inform current policymakers about overlooked. His lessons are especially important for today’s the dynamics of strategy and warfare across the vast reaches military, facing budget cuts as well as missions in transition. of the Pacific. This collection reveals Ellis to be a thinker This book is a collection of Adm. William Sims’ written who was ahead of his time in identifying concepts the U.S. work, and it investigates his relevance in addressing the military struggles with even today. questions facing today’s military personnel and policymakers. LCDR BENJAMIN F. ARMSTRONG, USN, is a graduate of the U.S. CAPT. B. A. FRIEDMAN is a field artillery officer in the United Naval Academy and Norwich University and is a PhD States Marine Corps currently stationed at Camp Lejeune, candidate in war studies with King’s College, London. He has North Carolina. He is pursuing a master of arts in national been awarded the Alfred Thayer Mahan Award for Literary security and strategic studies through the Naval War 2 Achievement and is the editor of 21st Century Mahan. College. TO ORDER CALL 1-800-233-8764 OR GO ONLINE AT WWW.NIP.ORG TO ORDER CALL 1-800-233-8764 OR GO ONLINE AT � FEBRUARY � FEBRUARY 432 pp., 4 b/w maps, 6” x 9” 358 pp., 16 b/w photos, 1 line drawing, Paperback: $26.95 27 maps, 6” x 9” ISBN: 978-1-59114-559-2 Paperback: $25.95 History • Naval ISBN: 978-1-59114-196-9 History • WWII MAHAN ON NAVAL STRATEGY STRUGGLE FOR THE MIDDLE SEA Selections from the Writings of Rear Admiral The Great Navies at War in the Mediterranean Theater, Alfred Thayer Mahan 1940–1945 By Rear Adm. Alfred Thayer Mahan, USN By Vincent P. O’Hara With an introduction by John B. Hattendorf, Editor Mahan on Naval Strategy, available in paperback for the first The Mediterranean is the maritime crossroads where time, provides a selection of key writings from one of the Europe, Asia, and Africa meet. More major naval actions greatest naval theorists of all time. An original contributor to were fought there than in the Atlantic or Pacific yet the study of strategic thinking, Alfred Thayer Mahan presented remarkably little has been written about the subject. This concepts and theories in The Influence of Seapower and his other fresh study of the Mediterranean’s naval war analyzes the writings that provide guidance in developing strategies to deal actions and performances of the five major navies—British, with the maritime challenges of the twenty-first century. With Italian, French, German, and American—during the entire this unique collection of key articles and chapters from Mahan’s five-year campaign and examines the national imperatives works, readers have a single, convenient reference to help them that drove each nation’s maritime strategy.
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