Mahan Naval Strategy
Mahan Naval Strategy
Mahan Naval Strategy
BY
BOSTON
LITTLE, BROWN, AND COMPANY
1915
Copyri'glU, 1911,
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nine, and in like manner the main body. The smaller, being
for the moment unavoidably separate, must take its chance.
The case is abJolutely on all-fours with the proposition to
divide our fteet between the Atlantic and Pacific, and with
the Russian blunder of that character in the late war.
So long as the troops are aftoat, the dispositions of the
convoying fteet center around their protection, are tactical
in character, and governed by the rules applicable to every-
force on the march when liable to meet the enemy; but
when the objective is reached and won, the troops take care
of themselves, the tactical dispositions of the fleet for them
disappear, and there arises immediately the strategic ques-
tion of the communications of the army, of the command
of the sea, and of the disposition of the fleet so as best to
insure these objectB. An intermediate hostile port, like
Malta, flanking the communications, may then draw upon
itBelf the full, or at least the proportioned, effort of the fleet.
The treatment of our present theme thus far has been
by statement of general principles, with only incidental
illustration. There will now be cited at some length two
historical examples of expeditions such as those under dis-
ouBBion. Separated as the two are by an interval of two
thousand years, the leBBons which they afford in common
illustrate strikingly the permanence of the great general
principles of strstegy.
. Sir Edward Creasy, in his" Fifteen Decisive Battles of
theWorld," ranks among these the defeat of the Athenians
before Syracuse, B. c. 415.1 Whether the particular claim
be good or not, this event certainly has a high value to
doubting students of military- history-, by showing that,
under all conditions of · material or mechanical develop-
ment, strategic problems remain the same, though affected
by tactical difficulties peculiar to each age.
At the time in question, two centuries before the great
1 See map facing page 230.
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FOUNDATIONS AND PRINCIPLES 223
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224 NAVAL STRATEGY
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ATHENIAN EXPEDITION
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