Wielding the Trident Admiral Raymond A. Spruance and America's Victory in the Pacific
33,99 €
inkl. gesetzl. MwSt.,
Beschreibung
Produktdetails
Einband
Gebundene Ausgabe
Erscheinungsdatum
17.03.2026
Verlag
Naval Institute PressSeitenzahl
360
Maße (L/B/H)
23,3/15,7/2,6 cm
Gewicht
640 g
Sprache
Englisch
EAN
9798899190001
This first biography of Adm. Raymond A. Spruance in over fifty years offers a compelling portrait of the quiet strategist behind key U.S. victories in the Pacific War. Drawing on rich archival material, it highlights Spruance's sharp intellect, decisive leadership, and lasting influence on naval warfare from World War II to the Cold War.
Wielding the Trident is the first biography of Adm. Raymond A. Spruance in more than fifty years, offering a fresh look at one of the most brilliant naval commanders of the Pacific War. Drawing on extensive archival research, original sources, and recent scholarship, author Andrew K. Blackley brings the admiral's extraordinary career to vivid life. The trident, central to the U.S. Naval Academy's motto, Ex Scientia Tridens (From Knowledge, Seapower), symbolizes Spruance's unparalleled intelligence and command of naval power.
Admiral Spruance was a consummate thinker and strategist, wielding the trident of naval airpower, warships, and amphibious forces with unmatched skill. Known as the "electric brain" for his sharp intellect, Spruance was hailed as the victor of the Battle of Midway and led the Fifth Fleet to decisive victories in the Marshall Islands, Marianas, Iwo Jima, and Okinawa-campaigns that paved the way for Japan's defeat. His philosophy of warfighting- "violent, overwhelming force, swiftly applied"-ensured that the Japanese never vanquished him.
Spruance's approach to command was methodical and calculated. While others saw gambling as a necessary trait for a commander, he took risks only when the odds were heavily in his favor, stacking them through careful planning and analysis. Despite his monumental achievements, the admiral shunned fame, finding satisfaction in knowing he had done his best to secure victory. This sense of humility has left his legacy overshadowed by contemporaries like Adm. Chester W. Nimitz and Adm. William F. Halsey Jr. In this biography, Andrew Blackley shifts the spotlight back to Spruance, showcasing his decisive impact on the Pacific War.
Blackley provides more than a World War II narrative centered on an important naval leader and his key campaigns. He offers insight into Spruance's life before the war as he climbed the "fleet ladder" and served multiple tours at the Naval War College. While there, Spruance focused his keen analytic mind on the problems of naval strategy for a war against Japan in the Pacific. Following the war, Spruance transitioned to president of the Naval War College, where he initiated studies that gleaned insights from World War II and established conceptual thinking about a war at sea against an emerging competitor-the Soviet Union.
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