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| Kaigun: Strategy, Tactics, and Technology in the Imperial Japanese Navy, 1887-1941 | | Author: | David C. Evans | ISBN: | 0870211927 | Format: | Handover | Publish Date: | June, 2005 | | | | | | | | | Book Review | | | Kaigun: Strategy, Tactics, and Technology in the Imperial Japanese Navy, 1887-1941 FROM THE PUBLISHER One of the great spectacles of modern naval history is the Imperial Japanese Navy's instrumental role in Japan's rise from an isolationist feudal kingdom to a potent military empire stridently confronting, in 1941, the world's most powerful nation. Years of painstaking research and analysis of previously untapped Japanese-language resources have produced this remarkable history of the navy's dizzying development, tactical triumphs, and humiliating defeat. Unrivaled in its breadth of coverage and attention to detail, this important new study explores the foreign and indigenous influences on the navy's thinking about naval warfare and how to plan for it. Focusing primarily on the much-neglected period between the world wars, David C. Evans and Mark R. Peattie, two widely esteemed historians, persuasively explain how the Japanese failed to prepare properly for the war in the Pacific despite an arguable advantage in capability.
FROM THE CRITICS Booknews A history of one of the major instruments of Japan's transformation from an isolated feudal kingdom to a potent military empire that by 1941 could challenge the world's most powerful nations. Focusing on the neglected period between the world wars, explores the foreign and indigenous influences in the thinking about and planning for naval warfare, and the Japanese failure to prepare properly for the war in the Pacific. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.
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