Rethinking Maritime Strategy: a New Approach for a More Complex Maritime Environment
Skip Navigation Links.

Historic Documents and Reviews

 Historical Perspectives on International Cooperation at Sea  Naval cooperation succeeds best when political, economic, and military prerequisite conditions are in place by Dr. Robert Leonhard, JHUAPL
View/Post Comments
 ...FROM THE SEA   (1992) Navy/Marine Corps strategy statement
View/Post Comments
 FORWARD ...From the Sea  (1994) updates/expands the strategic concepts in the 1992 paper
View/Post Comments
 Navy Operational Concept (1997)   guidance on operational primacy – ability to carry out any naval, joint or coalition mission
View/Post Comments
 Naval Power 21: The Naval Vision   (2002) assure access, fight and win, continually transform to improve
View/Post Comments
 USN Capstone Strategies & Concepts (1970-2006)  by Peter Swartz (CNA): an in-depth study of past US Navy and national security documents relating to Maritime Strategy
View/Post Comments
 Evolution of the U.S. Navy’s Maritime Strategy, 1977–1986  Naval War College Newport Papers #19 by John B. Hattendorf
View/Post Comments
 US Strategy for the Post-Vietnam Era:  The New Imperial Navy by Michael T. Klare
View/Post Comments
 Missions of the US Navy  Naval War College Review by VADM Stansfield Turner (Mar-Apr 1974)
View/Post Comments
 Naval Doctrine Publication (NDP) 1, Naval Warfare   provides a framework for detailed Navy and Marine Corps doctrine. It describes the character and employment of our naval forces, highlighting the distinctiveness of warfare in the maritime environment" (Mar 1994)
View/Post Comments
 Forward...From the Sea: The Navy Operational Concept  "This paper sets our direction for operational primacy in the next century." (Mar 1997)
View/Post Comments
 Navy Strategic Planning Guidance (NSPG)  2nd Edition, "...provides a prioritized set of capabilities to the IWAR/OPNAV PPBS planning process with direct strategic linkage to a maritime concept..." (APR 2000)
View/Post Comments
 Naval Operating Concept for Joint Operations   represents an initial effort of an iterative process to describe how the Navy and Marine Corps will train, organize, deploy, employ, and sustain a more capable and ready force, now through 2020, as part of the Joint Force." (2002)
View/Post Comments

Archives

April 2007
August 2008
August 2009
December 2006
February 2007
January 2007
January 2009
July 2007
June 2007

Home | About | Discussions | Core Questions | Library | Updates | Your Comments

NOTICE: This web site is hosted by the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory.  Any document posted is the sole responsibility of the service or agency representative providing the document.  Posted documents are for collaborative purposes and not for public release. Do not distribute documents without author's permission.  Neither classified nor sensitive material should be submitted.

Privacy Notice/Legal Disclaimer
© 2006 — Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory

NOTICE

While your comments are appreciated and welcomed, any submissions will be reviewed for appropriateness and may be edited for the sake of brevity before being posted to this site.