Who can hold the sea The U.S. Navy in the Cold War, 1945-1960

James D. Hornfischer

Book - 2022

"A close-up, action-filled narrative about the crucial role the U.S. Navy played in the early years of the Cold War, from the New York Times bestselling author of The Fleet at Flood Tide This landmark account of the U.S. Navy in the Cold War, Who Can Hold the Sea, combines narrative history with scenes of stirring adventure on--and under--the high seas. In 1945, at the end of World War II, the victorious Navy sends its sailors home and decommissions most of its warships. But this peaceful interlude is short-lived, as Stalin, America's former ally, makes aggressive moves in Europe and the Far East. Winston Churchill crystallizes the growing Communist threat by declaring the existence of "the Iron Curtain," and the Truman ...Doctrine is set up to contain Communism by establishing U.S. military bases throughout the world. Set against this background of increasing Cold War hostility, Who Can Hold the Sea paints the dramatic rise of the Navy's crucial postwar role in a series of exciting episodes: the tests of A-bombs dropped on warships at Bikini Island the growing science of undersea warfare and invention of sonar the Korean War as a deadly test of naval superiority the growth of the modern Navy with its dramatic game-changers: cruisers fitted with surface-to-air missiles, and the invention of the nuclear submarine lessons learned from the dramatic sinking of the submarine USS Cochino in the Norwegian Sea the USS Nautilus's dangerous, first-ever cruise underneath the North Pole As in all of Hornfischer's work, the events unfold in riveting--and often surprising--detail. The story of the Cold War at sea is ultimately the story of America's victorious contest to protect the free world"--

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Subjects
Published
New York : Bantam Books [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
James D. Hornfischer (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xviii, 459 pages, 24 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations, maps ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 413-423) and index.
ISBN
9780399178641
  • Fleet at a crossroads
  • Memo from Moscow
  • Toward containment
  • The big jolt
  • The neutron burn
  • Unalterable counterforce
  • An atomic fleet
  • The admirals revolt
  • The man in the high tower
  • A true submarine
  • Abandon ship
  • The revolt continues
  • Problem on a peninsula
  • Losing Seoul, holding Pusan
  • New war for the Old Corps
  • Strike from the sea
  • War with China
  • To the Yalu
  • Nerves of ice
  • Air superiority?
  • Heavy metal
  • Courageous impatience
  • The gadgeteer
  • Alliance of rivals
  • Special project
  • Trouble in the Suez
  • "NAUTILUS 90 NORTH"
  • Forward fleets like firefighters
  • SIOP
  • To build a better battleship
  • "From the deep to target".
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

This excellent naval history elucidates how the atomic bomb and nuclear power shaped the geopolitical rivalry between the U.S. and the Soviet Union. Historian and literary agent Hornfischer (The Fleet at Flood Tide), who died in 2021, unearths fascinating anecdotes, noting, for instance, that the first test of atomic bombs against warships involved 200 pigs, some of whom "wore standard U.S. Navy antiflash suits and were smeared with antiflash lotion." He also draws enlightening character sketches of key players including diplomat George F. Kennan, whose "Long Telegram" from Moscow in 1946 gave rise to America's containment policy against the Soviet Union; and Adm. Hyman Rickover, who developed a reliable nuclear reactor that would fit in a normal ship's engine room; and Adm. Arleigh Burke, who decided in 1956 that all new submarines would be nuclear propelled. Recounting the blockade of North Korea's ports during the Korean War, the development of the Polaris and Sidewinder missiles, the Suez Crisis, and the nuclear submarine Nautilus's transit underneath the North Pole, among other events, Hornfischer enlivens the proceedings with sharp analysis and lucid prose. This impressively researched and thoroughly accessible account fires on all cylinders. (May)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

With half a dozen accounts of the U.S. Navy under his belt, award-winning naval historian Hornfischer does not disappoint with his latest. Following Japan's surrender, American ships transitioned smoothly into the massive job of carrying home several million soldiers and "mothballing" nearly 2,000 ships. However, by the end of the year, naval leaders confronted a life-and-death battle, as Congress was considering a bill to unify the Navy and Army under a single leader. That it might save money and increase efficiency was little comfort to Navy admirals, certain that the Navy was the nation's first line of defense, and they persuaded Congress that it must continue to stand alone. Hornfischer takes the Navy's side, emphasizing that "it was control of the sea that made every other dimension of national power possible. America was the only nation to have that capacity." Despite the temporary shrinkage, America's Navy dwarfed all others and controlled the world's sea lanes throughout this period and into the present day. The Soviet Union never attempted to compete, and the absence of a world war does not mean the absence of fireworks. The author delivers plenty, although many were political or technological. Most experts assumed that future wars would be nuclear, but they were wrong, and Hornfischer offers adept accounts of atomic tests and the Navy's creation of a nuclear strike force. Readers will enjoy the history of the atomic submarine but may scratch their heads over an interesting but overlong story about the 1949 sinking of the diesel submarine Cochino. The author's well-rendered chronicle of the Korean War may be one of the first to focus on the Navy. He holds a low opinion of the Air Force's preference for strategic bombing, which wreaked havoc behind the lines but often left Army units begging in vain for help. Long accustomed to working closely with the Marines, carrier-based planes provided them accurate, often lifesaving air support. An expert account for fans of military history. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

1 Fleet at a Crossroads When Admiral William F. Halsey, Jr., arrived in New York City early in the morning on Friday, December 14, 1945, snow blanketed nearly the entirety of the Empire State. An overnight storm had forced the cancellation of most flights into La Guardia Field, so he traveled up from Washington by rail. He took a waiting limousine from Penn Station to the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, refreshed himself with a nap, then donned his whites and took the limo to the airport in Queens. A motorcade was awaiting the conqueror of the Pacific. A Navy band greeted him with a flourish. Two battalions of sailors presented arms as the cannoneers of an honor guard fired a seventeen-gun salute, two short of what the newly minted five-star admiral deserved. Holding his greatcoat tight against the wind, Halsey joined New York Mayor Fiorello H. La Guardia in an open car. Halsey was less than two months home from Japan. After the boozy celebration in Yokohama that had marked his relief from occupation duty and fleet command, he had flown home to Pearl Harbor, then begun a homeward transit that ended with the festal passage of his flagship, the battleship South Dakota, along with thirteen other vessels, under the Golden Gate Bridge on October 15. A worldwide homecoming was under way. Demobilization was the word of the day. The drawdown was swift and its effects stunning. Just ninety days after Tokyo's surrender, with its mission switched from crushing Japan to saving her, the U.S. military was giving away its strength at a rate of 1.5 million men a month. As Admiral Chester W. Nimitz, the Pacific commander in chief, wrote to Secretary of the Navy James V. Forrestal, after four years of war, peace was an abnormal state. "The vast machine that had gained victory had to be ground to a stop, and flow of material had to be checked, then reversed. The problems of demobilization and return to a peacetime basis were in some respects more difficult than those of continuing the war." On the day Halsey arrived in New York, nine harbors on the East and West coasts were scheduled to receive seventy-nine ships bearing more than sixty-two thousand war veterans. From Calcutta and Marseilles, from Bermuda, Antwerp, and Manila, the maritime carriage that had delivered America's armies worldwide brought them home again, just in time to celebrate Christmas--"the first in six years not mocked by universal war," Nimitz noted. The newspapers published the itineraries, listing returning ships and units. In New York, the arrival of the passenger liner Queen Mary, bringing home 11,409 combat veterans from Southampton, England, that same day would have been the story had Halsey not taken the headlines. As the leading public face of the Navy, he was the one officer who could be counted upon to command a crowd. His peers during the war--Raymond Spruance, Marc Mitscher, Nimitz himself--were by comparison distant from the public, disinclined to speak of their work, secretive and necessarily so, they said. The Navy employed a small handful of public relations officers to buffer its leaders from the inquiries of the press. But with controversy now raging between the Army and Navy over their postwar roles, missions, and appropriations, the brain trust of the sea services realized that the game of public affairs might be a contest for their survival. This more than any surplus of ticker tape on Wall Street accounted for Halsey's presence in an open limo on a bitter winter's morning. The car accelerated into the bustle of Queens, then pushed south on Thirty-fourth Avenue across the Meeker Avenue Bridge toward Brooklyn. The energy of the crowds sustained through Greenpoint and all the way to the ramp of the Manhattan Bridge. Crossing the East River, Halsey could look down over the waterfront headquarters of the New York Port of Embarkation, from which half of the wartime armies fielded by the United States had shipped overseas. The Brooklyn Navy Yard, employing at its wartime peak more than 71,000 workers, had constructed just eighteen months earlier the battleship Missouri, following in the wake of the Iowa and North Carolina out Lower New York Bay and into action. The last of the Essex-class carriers, the USS Oriskany, was launched here sixty days before Halsey arrived. Her sister ship Reprisal languished incomplete, awaiting use in ordnance tests and scrapping. The U.S. Navy ended World War II with nearly 1,200 combatant ships, 41,000 planes, and 3.4 million personnel. It had 758,000 civilians on its worldwide payroll, more than half of them at the government-owned naval shipyards at Bremerton, Boston, Charleston, Mare Island, New York, Norfolk, Pearl Harbor, Philadelphia, Portsmouth, San Francisco, and San Pedro, and naval aviation centers such as Pensacola, Florida, Whidbey Island, Washington, and Corpus Christi, Texas. The Navy's infrastructure of yards, bases, and shore facilities was the product of about $12 billion in wartime investment that drove a sixteenfold increase in its prewar size. Navy expenditures on plant facilities were 25 percent larger than the plant accounts of General Motors, U.S. Steel, and AT&T combined. The Bureau of Ships alone had an investment account nearly as big as U.S. Steel. Though new ships were still coming--the Brooklyn yard had put the aircraft carrier Franklin D. Roosevelt, the third of the big new Midway-class flattops, into commission in October--the Navy that had bestridden the world in the winter of 1945 was coming home to shrink and diminish, discharging its strength back into the nation. In Philadelphia, experimental techniques of ship preservation were ready for mass application in a $40 million effort that would put 1,896 ships into an inactive reserve by September 1, 1946. The light cruiser USS Brooklyn was the first combatant to undergo "mothballing." The metaphor from the coat closet understated the intricacies of preserving such a large vessel in a state that would make possible her return to service within thirty days of an activation order. Yard workers removed all perishable and combustible stores, including food, batteries, fuel, and explosives. Metal surfaces susceptible to corrosion, such as motors, pumps, and engines, were sprayed with a waxy rust retardant. Sensitive equipment that could not be removed for dehumidified storage received an additional airtight casing, woven with five layers from a spray gun and sealed with a coat of aluminum paint. Inside, dehumidifiers connected to ventilation ducts and fire mains allowed the ship to inhale dry air and exhale humidity. Where airflow did not reach, desiccants and other drying agents did the job passively. After the six-month process was finished, a complement of just five officers and fifty-nine men aboard could maintain a cruiser like the Brooklyn during her long sleep in the "zipper fleet." The rapid pace of the demobilization concerned President Harry S. Truman. A believer in a "prepared soldier-citizenry," he was working that December on a bill to enact universal military training. The new law would require every male between the ages of eighteen and twenty to report for a year of indoctrination followed by six years in the reserves. With such a base of manpower available to redeploy hundreds of mothballed ships, a wartime fleet could be more quickly surged in case of war. "We can with fairness no longer look to the veterans of this war for any future military service," the president would write. Meanwhile, the imperative to cut costs fell upon the Pentagon like a weather front. At the urging of Truman and with the full support of the War Department, the Senate was considering a bill to unify the Navy and War departments, along with a new department designating the Air Force as a single administrative entity. S. 2044 would put the tripartite Pentagon under the leadership of a single Secretary of Common Defense and deprive the secretaries of war and the Navy of their long-standing membership in the president's cabinet. The push for change had begun the day before Germany surrendered, on May 7, 1945, when the Army's top civilian administrator, Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson, wrote Secretary Forrestal to argue that the two departments should be unified. With one powerful secretary supervising the entire defense establishment, Stimson said, there would come a windfall of savings. "The principle is settled. . . . ​The problem is merely to achieve the most effective possible execution of an established policy. . . . ​I think it will be our duty to report that belief to the Congress in the earnest hope that your department can come along then, or later, with a concurring view." Stimson's insistent voice was that of a man secure in his relationship with the White House. Having engineered the 1930 London Naval Treaty that had limited the size of interwar fleets, the Army boss was now promising to outdo himself, impairing the position of his rival service by unilateral decree. But Forrestal thought the service heads, Congress, and the Joint Chiefs of Staff should take the time to absorb more carefully the lessons of the Second World War, which at the time had yet to be won. That was where the matter lay until August, when the twin flashes of atomic light destroyed Japan as a war-making power. Excerpted from Who Can Hold the Sea: The U. S. Navy in the Cold War 1945-1960 by James D. Hornfischer All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.