Year: 2013 Language: english Author: Gary E. Weir Genre: History Publisher: Naval History & Heritage Command, Washington, DC, USA Edition: First ISBN: 9781505512120 Format: PDF Quality: eBook Pages count: 346 Description: After the Cold War, maritime forces shifted much of their focus from engagements at sea to events ashore. Naval forces were uniquely positioned to influence regional conflicts and to conduct peace support operations called for by the international community—particularly when they cooperated with one another. In this book, naval historians from Australia, Canada, the United Kingdom, and the United States explore how their navies created an effective multinational, or “combined,” framework of interoperability while under national rules of engagement. The authors address cases including maritime operations during the First Gulf War (1990–1991) and later (2001–2003) as part of Operation Enduring Freedom; off the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia in Operation Sharp Guard (1991–1996); and in East Timor during Operation Stabilise (1999–2000). This multinational naval force’s success in each crisis depended not just on shared doctrine, training, tactics, and technology, but on the trust its sailors built in combined operations over time.
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You Cannot Surge Trust
Language: english
Author: Gary E. Weir
Genre: History
Publisher: Naval History & Heritage Command, Washington, DC, USA
Edition: First
ISBN: 9781505512120
Format: PDF
Quality: eBook
Pages count: 346
Description: After the Cold War, maritime forces shifted much of their focus from engagements at sea to events ashore. Naval forces were uniquely positioned to influence regional conflicts and to conduct peace support operations called for by the international community—particularly when they cooperated with one another.
In this book, naval historians from Australia, Canada, the United Kingdom, and the United States explore how their navies created an effective multinational, or “combined,” framework of interoperability while under national rules of engagement.
The authors address cases including maritime operations during the First Gulf War (1990–1991) and later (2001–2003) as part of Operation Enduring Freedom; off the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia in Operation Sharp Guard (1991–1996); and in East Timor during Operation Stabilise (1999–2000).
This multinational naval force’s success in each crisis depended not just on shared doctrine, training, tactics, and technology, but on the trust its sailors built in combined operations over time.
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