May 20, 2012

Birth of the Modern American Navy

While American military dominance and a quasi-Pax American have been in place since the end of the Second World War, the United States remains a young world power. For most of the 19th century the United States was nothing more than a slight annoyance to most European powers.

It was not until after the American Civil War that the rest of the world began to take notice of the burgeoning military power in the New World. After the Civil War, a bloodied United States emerged stronger and became an economic powerhouse. The vast fields lined with crops and the churning factories of the northern cities were not enough to earn the respect of the world though. As American Naval Officer Alfred Thayer Mahan could have predicted, the American path to power would have to be earned on the seas.

Mahan commanded several ships without distinction during his long naval career, but his influence did not come from his actions. His writings on the necessity of great nations to establish naval power soon became a Bible for leaders to follow. Mahan’s writings helped to start a naval arms race in Europe. In the United States, his influence helped convince leaders to invest a modern capital fleet for national defense.

His advice prompted Congress to make important investments in defense during peacetime for perhaps the first time in American history. A legacy was established that a portion of income tax would be tied maintaining a strong standing force despite America’s heritage as a nation without a standing military.

Mahan’s views proved prophetic during the brief Spanish-American War. The American fleet proved itself during action against an established European power. The United States had a tiny empire and a spot on the world stage. It would take future conflicts to establish the United State as the dominant power, but by beginning of the 20th century the United States was already a significant naval power.

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Taking Over Someone Else’s War in Fear

WASHINGTON - JULY 08:  Wentworth Military Acad...
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Between 1955 and 1961, the U.S. Government deposited 78 percent of the total American foreign aid program into a single point on the globe. Fear of communism spawned the idea. Fear of leaving our recent WWII ally, France, holding the bag in Vietnam fed the infection. Even though Ho Chi Minh begged for help in creating a democracy to replace the vulgar dictatorial rule of France, the U.S. government turned a blind eye, opening the door to one of the greatest ‘non-war’ disasters in American history.

It is pretty easy to point fingers 45 years later. What turned into a worldwide disaster was created due to fear and pride running the show. If a person makes decisions based on fear and pride, the ability to use logic and wisdom gets thrown out the door. It doesn’t matter if the decision maker is a single woman raising two kids, or a general minding an army of a million. Using fear as the primary starting point in decision making will ruin your day. In the event you are the general, it could ruin many people’s days to tune of a war that lasts 25 years. That cost includes the lives of military personnel and civilians on both sides of the conflict not only is countless deaths, but in emotional damage that lasts generations afterwards.

Were power, greed and corruption involved in the Vietnam conflict? Ask yourself this question: What war has not included greed and corruption?

The men and women who serve in the armed forces most often enter wanting to help. You may know dozens of vets, young and old, and you will get very much the same answer from each: they want to help the democratic cause.

A huge number of Americans do not study history even when they are taking the classes. This leaves a nation blind to realities of war. One of the realities of war is that most people involved are innocent people who desire to give what they can to make humanity right. So what needs fixing? Fear. Something our soldiers are taught not to do.

Special force’s Adrenaline Filled Job

IN MEMORY OF A DEAD CHE
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Special Forces are military or paramilitary units, highly trained for specialized discreet operations like Reconnaissance, Search and Destroy Operations, Guerrilla war-fare, Counter terrorism, Direct action, High profile Hostage situations and Direct actions. They operate in small groups, independently or in support of conventional military units on the field. Their operations are all based on principles of Stealth, tight team work and Speed. They are self sufficient high value assets of the country’s Military and are of high prominence.
They are highly trained both in close quarters combat and ranged combat equipped with modern weapons, armaments and equipment’s. Using suitable conventional as well as non conventional means of transport to achieve the objectives in hand they get the most impossible of the jobs done. They usually make use of Helicopters, small boats, Parachuting or submarines to infiltrate into the combat zone or beyond the enemy lines. They are regarded as force multipliers as a team of around 12 commandos can train and lead a group of 100-200 indigenous guerrilla fighters against the enemy armed forces.
Special Forces were extensively used in World War II by both the allies and the axes powers, they also played a very important role during Operation Desert-Storm and Enduring Freedom. Special Forces were used to search and destroy Iraqi SCUD’s and to sabotage enemy communication lines. Office of Strategic Services (OSS) was formed in the United States for the purpose of gathering intelligence as well as conducting Special Ops. Rangers division was formed later in 1942. Special Forces were used in the modern times in Kosovo and Afghanistan, to train and lead the local guerrillas and also to co ordinate the air strikes on the hostiles. Special Forces have played a very important role in both wartime and peacetime ops. They were used during the Indo-Pak war in 1971, Gulf war, Afghanistan, Kosovo, Bosnia, Iranian and the Japanese embassy Hostage Crisis.

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Submarines Are The master of stealth weapons

Anti-submarine net between Fort York Redoubt a...
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Anti-Submarine warfare (ASW) is one of the branches in the naval warfare which emerged during the First World War. It involves using various weapons, aircrafts, warships, sensors and submarines to seek track and destroy the enemy submarines. ASW involves effective usage of sonar for detecting, classifying, tracking the enemy submarine and then destroying them using anti-submarine mines or torpedoes launched from surface ships, aircrafts or other underwater platforms in order to destroy it. ASW also involves protecting the friendly ships from submersed threats by guiding them.
During the World War I submarines were a big threat to the ships. The kind of ASW tactics used during those times was primitive. It just involved using small boats mounted with guns, used to hunt the submarines when they were on surface. The submarines of those times had to surface at regular intervals to charge their batteries and tin order to cross long distances. As time passed, by the advent of the new diesel engine and nuclear powered submarines, the ASW techniques became more and more sophisticated. The newer submarines can stay submersed for a longer period of time and the can also be stealth at the same time.
During the World War I period anti submarine nets were used at the harbors and chain link nets were suspended around the warships for protection from the torpedoes. Mines and depth charges were used to counter attack. And during the Second World War, aircrafts were used to attack submarines, long range patrol aircrafts were used for detection, escort carriers and destroyers were used for search and destroy patrols, later on active and passive sono-buoys deployed from aircrafts for detection and tracking.
Modern warships use torpedo carrying helicopters and homing torpedo launchers are used for ASW Specialized search vessels called Tuna boats are used to search and track submarines, Magnetic anomaly detectors and FLIR detection are also used for detection.

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G.I. Bill Creates Modern America

World War II remains the seismic event in modern political history. The war established the United State as the premier economic and military power in the world, and it created open trade between nations.

Foreign relations were reshaped by the war, but the legacy of the Second World War extends past world politics. The lives of nearly every American were touched by the war, and modern society was created by its affect effects. After the war, the United States completely emerged from the shackles of the Great Depression and entered into a golden age of prosperity. The G.I. Bill helped spread the prosperity to all classes.

President Franklin Roosevelt signed the G.I. bill in 1944. By the time the original bill expired in 1956 more than 7.8 million veterans had taken advantage of education and training funding providing by the bill. The original bill also provided mortgage loans for more than two million veterans. The American middle class emerged after World War Two.

After the success of the first G.I. Bill, congress saw it fit to continue the program. Servicemen and women would enjoy the benefits of education for their service ever since the first bill. Access to education on this scale caused American society to change. The American economy began to shift from a manufacturing base to a service based economy.

In today’s American society degreed individuals typically earn far more over the lifetime of a career. As the importance of education has increased so to has the importance of the G.I. Bill. The draft of the Cold War era has been eliminated. Volunteers have to be lured with promises of careers and funding for education. Many soldiers choose to use their G.I. Bill benefits to attend online degree programs while they complete their service. They emerge from military careers ready for service in the private or non-military public sectors.

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One Footlocker, One Porthole

American WWI poster. 1917. Text : Remember You...
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When Earl hit his eighteenth birthday he joined the Navy during WWII. To be on the safe side, he entered as a medic, not knowing that medics in the Navy filled both Navy and Marine positions. He stood in line, listening to someone going down the line saying: -Marine, marine, marine. . . when Earl was reached, the words hit his ears: “Navy. . . it was the first of many blessings to come.

Earl was on the second largest troop transport in the fleet a converted ocean liner. It was also fast, allowing it to steam on its own without being a sitting duck in convoys. Earl’s quarters were a private stateroom”an amazing luxury. One bed. One footlocker. One porthole.

Earl worked primarily with the men who were suffering from shell shock, although he often dealt with men whose bodies came aboard with missing parts. These events left endless silent scars inside. He bled as much as the injured.

The ship traveled three oceans. Bombay was always pleasant with families waiting ashore to take the men home to dinner, treating them like family and of course introducing them to their daughters in hopes for better lives with the young American boys.

One trip to New York found the ship full of German prisoners who were so shocked that the Statue of Liberty was still standing that they rushed to one side to stare. The ship listed. They had to be forced evenly across the deck, port and starboard. German propaganda convinced them that New York was leveled.

Earl’s stories were mostly fun with occasional drifts into the horrors of the medical unit. He didn’t talk much about those events. WWII broke him in many ways. He hid deep pain for the rest of his life. But he found enough strength to keep giving as a minister until he died in his mid eighties”broken medic to broken minister but tough enough to persevere. No one ever knew his deepest feelings. They were locked forever in a footlocker with one porthole open to God.

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