Book Shelf 25-2 ~ Anti-Accessing Fire Water

The first books for 2025 arrived at Hacienda de RockyMountainNavy. I acquired both through the U.S. Naval Institute sale at the end of 2024. Both are a bit dated but I still expect both to be good reads.

Anti-Access Warfare: Countering A2/AD Strategies, Sam J. Tangredi, Naval Institute Press, 2013.

The publisher’s blurb at Naval Institute Press online explains the book, in part, this way:

The study of anti-access or area denial strategies for use against American power projection capabilities has strong naval roots-which have been largely ignored by the most influential commentators. Sustained long-range power projection is both a unique strength of U.S. military forces and a requirement for an activist foreign policy and forward defense. In more recent years, the logic of the anti-access approach has been identified by the Department of Defense as a threat to this U.S. capability and the joint force.

Fire on the Water, Second Edition: China, America, and the Future of the Pacific, Robert Haddick, Naval Institute Press, 2022.

Again, taken from the publisher’s blurb at Naval Institute Press:

Detailing a new approach for sustaining conventional deterrence in the Indo-Pacific region, the author discusses the principles of strategy as they apply to the problems the United States faces in the region. He explains the critical role of aerospace power in the region and argues that the United States should urgently refashion its aerospace concepts if it is to deter aggression, focusing on Taiwan, the most difficult case. Haddick illustrates how the military-technical revolution has drastically changed the potential of naval forces in the Indo-Pacific region and why U.S. policymakers and planners need to adjust their expectations and planning for naval forces. Finally, he elucidates lessons U.S. policymakers can apply from past great-power competitions, examines long-term trends affecting the current competition, summarizes a new U.S. strategic approach to the region, describes how U.S. policymakers can overcome institutional barriers that stand in the way of a better strategy, and explains why U.S. policymakers and the public should have confidence about sustaining deterrence and peace in the region over the long term.

Both these book are being read as I continue my deep dive/translation of the wargame Joint All Domain Operation from War Drum Games (2024).

Photo by RMN

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