“Magnificent and important . . . should be on the shelves of
anyone with a genuine interest in the history of the Royal Navy in the
Second World War.” —Military History Monthly In August 1944 the
British Pacific Fleet did not exist. Six months later it was strong
enough to launch air attacks on Japanese territory, and by the end of
the war it constituted the most powerful force in the history of the
Royal Navy, fighting as professional equals alongside the US Navy in
the thick of the action. How this was achieved by a nation nearing
exhaustion after five years of conflict is a story of epic proportions
in which ingenuity, diplomacy and dogged persistence all played a
part. As much a political as a technical triumph, the BPF was uniquely
complex in its make-up: its C-in-C was responsible to the Admiralty
for the general direction of his Fleet; took operational orders from
the American Admiral Nimitz; answered to the Government of Australia
for the construction and maintenance of a vast base infrastructure,
and to other Commonwealth Governments for the ships and men that
formed his fully-integrated multi-national fleet. This ground-breaking
new work by David Hobbs describes the background, creation and
expansion of the BPF from its first tentative strikes, through
operations off the coast of Japan to its impact on the immediate
post-war period, including the opinions of USN liaison officers
attached to the British flagships. The book is the first to
demonstrate the real scope and scale of the BPF’s impressive
achievement. “Perhaps the greatest Royal Navy story of, at least,
the twentieth century.” —Aircrew Book Review
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The Royal Navy's Most Powerful Strike Force
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781783469222
Publisert
2014
Utgiver
Independent Publishers Group (Chicago Review Press)
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter