The U.S. Navy, the Mediterranean, and the Cold War, 1945-1947
By (Author) Edward J. Sheehy
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th August 1992
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
War and defence operations
359.40973
Hardback
208
This is a study of US naval operations in the Mediterranean from 1945 to 1947, a period that is crucial for understanding the Cold War and its origins. Edward J. Sheehy shows how America assumed the traditionally British role of providing Western naval strength in the area, detailing how an American squadron grew from skeleton size in 1945 into a powerful armada by the end of 1947. His analysis of the cautious, but effective use of naval power to counter the Soviet Union is intended for students of military and diplomatic history. Using extensive records of the US Department of Navy and State, Dr Sheehy examines decisions to assign naval vessels to the Mediterranean, governmental communications, the rationale for the naval presence in the area, and the working relationships between diplomatic and naval officials. The history begins with a brief summary of Western naval activity in the Mediterranean including the final months of World War II. The region witnessed a continual increase in activity from a cruiser's visit to Greece in late 1945 to developments toward a Sixth Fleet at the end of 1947. The naval build-up is thoroughly chronicled with accounts of the battleship Missouri's journey to the area, numerous destroyer and carrier cruises, Secretary of the Navy James Forrestal's September 1946 announcement affirming America's permanent presence in the Mediterranean, and President Harry S. Truman's August 1947 directive regarding visits to Greece.
. . . With its wealth of detail, the volume is a useful primary reference for studies of naval diplomacy.-Northern Mariner
Based on extensive research in primary and secondary sources, with a map and photographs, this book is a significant contribution to an understanding of the role of the Navy as an instrument of foreign policy.-The Historian
Recommended for libraries specializing in naval affairs. Professional.-Choice
Sheehy has done an admirable job in researching this book. This is an important book for those scholars of the early years of the Cold War who desire a greater understanding of early U.S. military actions taken to counter perceived Soviet moves toward regional hegemony in the post war years.-The Friday Review of Defense Literature
." . . With its wealth of detail, the volume is a useful primary reference for studies of naval diplomacy."-Northern Mariner
"Based on extensive research in primary and secondary sources, with a map and photographs, this book is a significant contribution to an understanding of the role of the Navy as an instrument of foreign policy."-The Historian
"Recommended for libraries specializing in naval affairs. Professional."-Choice
"Sheehy has done an admirable job in researching this book. This is an important book for those scholars of the early years of the Cold War who desire a greater understanding of early U.S. military actions taken to counter perceived Soviet moves toward regional hegemony in the post war years."-The Friday Review of Defense Literature
EDWARD J. SHEEHY is Assistant Professor of History at La Salle University. He specializes in U.S. naval and diplomatic history.