Theories of force projection and World War I
- Date:
- 1798 - present
- Areas Of Involvement:
- naval warfare
- sea power
- defense
- Related People:
- John F. Kennedy
- John McCain
- Richard E. Byrd
- Agnes Meyer Driscoll
- Edward Preble
- Related Facts And Data:
- Pearl Harbor attack - Facts
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Although the Union navy—especially its brown water (riverine) fleet—had been a crucial element in the prosecution of the Civil War, it was thereafter neglected for many years. In spite of naval stagnation, the U.S. Naval Institute was established in 1873 for the advancement of professional, literary, and scientific knowledge in the navy. Congress provided for the building of four new warships in 1883, the first since the Civil War, and the navy required that they be of domestic steel, thus stimulating the production of better-quality U.S. steel. The Naval War College was established by Commodore Stephen B. Luce at Newport, Rhode Island, in 1884, and a member of its staff, Capt. Alfred Thayer Mahan, published in 1890 The Influence of Sea Power Upon History, 1660–1783. Mahan’s writings brought him academic honours at home and abroad, as well as the presidency of the American Historical Association in 1902. His theories on naval force projection also found a wide audience among planners in Europe, and they played no small part in spurring the naval arms race that preceded World War I.
The U.S. Navy won easy victories over a seriously mismatched foe in the Spanish-American War (1898). Adm. George Dewey annihilated the Spanish Pacific fleet at the Battle of Manila Bay (May 1, 1898), and the U.S. Atlantic fleet under William Sampson destroyed Spain’s naval presence in the Caribbean at the Battle of Santiago de Cuba (July 3, 1898). During the next two decades the U.S. Navy grew steadily in power and efficiency. Pres. Theodore Roosevelt provided much of the impetus for its growth and aided in the national popularity of the service. He ordered 16 battleships of the Atlantic Fleet on a cruise around the world in 1907–09. The hulls of the battleships had been painted white, earning them the nickname “the Great White Fleet,” and the global tour improved crew efficiency and had valuable diplomatic effects. Naval aviation was inaugurated in 1910 when a civilian pilot, Eugene Ely, flew an airplane off a cruiser at Hampton Roads, Virginia. The next year he landed on and took off from a cruiser in San Francisco Bay.
In 1915 the Office of the Chief of Naval Operations was established, and in 1916 an important shipbuilding program, influenced largely by Japanese actions, was begun. During World War I U.S. naval vessels did not participate in any sea battles, but the navy was expanded eightfold and performed many important duties. It laid an enormous antisubmarine minefield in the North Sea and sent a battleship division to join the British Grand Fleet and a second division to Bantry Bay to guard against heavy raiders. It also sent a naval aviation bombing squadron to France, provided a battery of heavy guns on railway cars for the Western Front, and transported more than 2,000,000 troops to France. During the interwar years, the first U.S. aircraft carrier, the USS Langley, was launched (1922), a naval patrol was placed in the Atlantic (1939), and the escort of Allied convoys was begun (1941).
World War II
After the beginning of World War II in 1939, the U.S. Navy began a huge building program, including planes, warships, merchant ships, landing craft, and various special types of vessels. It expanded from a force of about 300,000 officers and men in mid-1941 to more than 3,000,000 by war’s end. A patrol was instituted in the Atlantic in 1939, Iceland was occupied in 1941, and the escort of convoys was also begun that year. After the disastrous Pearl Harbor attack of December 7, 1941, the U.S. Navy helped seize French Morocco in November 1942 and landed U.S. troops in Morocco and Algiers. It furnished sea and naval air strength for the seizure of Sicily, Salerno, Anzio, and southern France. While combating German undersea warfare in the Atlantic, the navy furnished convoy escorts and special search groups, including aircraft carriers, planes, destroyers, and antisubmarine vessels. In the Normandy landings of June 1944, the navy supplied large numbers of amphibious ships and landing craft as well as combat ships to provide fire support for troops.
As the Pacific War progressed, Japanese amphibious forces made landings in Malaya, the Philippines, South Pacific islands, New Guinea, and the Netherlands East Indies. Early in 1942 the Japanese were building up Rabaul as a great base, and on May 8, 1942, in the Battle of the Coral Sea, fought by carrier planes, a task force commanded by Rear Adm. Frank J. Fletcher checked the Japanese in their expansion southeastward, On June 4, 1942, the decisive Battle of Midway was fought. Warships of virtually every class were engaged in the action, but the heavy blows were struck by carrier planes, and Japan lost its four best carriers together with all their planes and almost all their pilots. The U.S. Navy suffered heavy casualties among carrier pilots and lost one of three carriers present, but for the Japanese the result was devastating.
On June 15, 1944, Adm. Raymond Spruance struck the inner ring of Japanese defenses by landing marines on Saipan and on June 19 fought the Battle of the Philippine Sea, which resulted in a further heavy loss of Japanese carrier pilots and planes, as well as two Japanese carriers sunk by submarines. The Battle of Leyte Gulf (October 25, 1944) was one of the decisive naval victories of the war, but it was made possible only by the remarkable bravery of the officers and sailors of escort carrier task force Taffy 3. Third Fleet commander Adm. William Halsey had shifted his forces to the north in pursuit of the remaining Japanese carriers, but, in doing so, he left the American amphibious forces on Leyte Island woefully unprotected. The ships of Taffy 3—six escort carriers, three destroyers, and four destroyer escorts under the command of Rear Adm. Clifton Sprague—were all that stood between the landing beaches and Vice Adm. Kurita Takeo’s Center Force of four battleships—including the massive super battleship Yamato—eight cruisers, and nearly a dozen destroyers.
The hopelessly outgunned men of Taffy 3 went on to fight one of the most-storied engagements of U.S. Navy history, knocking out three Japanese cruisers and a destroyer and forcing Kurita’s task force to retire at a cost of two escort carriers, two destroyers, and a destroyer escort. All the men of Taffy 3 were awarded the Presidential Unit Citation, and Capt. Ernest Evans of the destroyer USS Johnston was posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor. In his after-action report, Sprague stated that “the failure of the enemy main body and encircling light forces to completely wipe out all vessels of this Task Unit can be attributed to our successful smoke screen, our torpedo counter-attack, continuous harassment of the enemy by bomb, torpedo, and strafing air attacks, timely maneuvers, and the definite partiality of Almighty God.” Sea power was of central importance in the Pacific, destroying the Japanese merchant marine through submarine warfare, crippling its fleet, and leaving bases like Rabaul and Truk with large garrisons to die on the vine.
During World War II, the U.S. Navy established the Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service (WAVES) unit, which was its corps of female members. Their status was similar to that of male members of the naval reserve, and about 100,000 women served in a wide range of roles during the war, including as instructors for male pilots-in-training. The WAVES unit was disbanded in 1978, when women’s units of the U.S. armed forces were combined with previously all-male units.