Navies of South-East Asia

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A comparative study
A01=Jack McCaffrie
A01=James Goldrick
ASW
Author_Jack McCaffrie
Author_James Goldrick
Cam Ranh Bay
Cambodian Navy
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Category=JWA
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Category=NHF
Category=NHW
East Timor
EEZs
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Fac
Fast Patrol Craft
Goldrick
Great Coco Island
Hang Tuah
Law of the Sea analysis
LST
Maritime Security
maritime security studies
maritime strategic competition in Asia
McCaffrie
military capability development
MMEA
Naval Forces
Navies of South-East Asia
Navies of South-East Asia: A comparative study
Patrol Craft
Phu Quoc
PT PAL
regional naval modernisation
RMN
RSN
Singapore Air Force
SLOC Security
South Vietnamese
South Vietnamese Navy
Southeast Asian defence policy
submarine acquisition trends
Vietnamese Military
Vietnamese Navy
West Germany

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138819696
  • Weight: 590g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 12 Sep 2014
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This book provides a comprehensive survey of the development and operations of the navies of South-East Asia since the end of World War II.

The navies of South-East Asia have rarely been the subject of systematic attention but, as the maritime strategic balance within Asia becomes more complex and open to challenge through the rise of China, they will play increasingly significant roles. While most have had only limited strength in the past, the majority are acquiring new capabilities, notably submarines, which will profoundly alter their ability to influence events.

This volume outlines the difficulties that each navy has faced in developing capability in competition, not only with local armies and air forces, but with other national requirements. The authors analyse the way in which each has been shaped by history and by changing maritime strategic concepts, particularly through developments such as the 1982 Law of the Sea Convention. Drawing upon this contextual information, the book goes on to examine how the navies are likely to develop in the future, what new challenges they will face and the nature of the roles they will play within a region of increasing global strategic significance.

This book will be of much interest to students of naval policy, SE Asian politics, regional security, strategic studies and IR in general.

James Goldrick retired from the Australian Navy in 2012 as a two-star Rear-Admiral. His previous books include studies of the opening months of the First World War at sea (The King’s Ships Were at Sea, USNI, 1984) and of the development of South Asian navies (No Easy Answers, Lancer, 1997).

Jack McCaffrie retired from the RAN as a Commodore (one-star) in 2003. He currently works with the RAN Sea Power Centre where he is writing the second edition of the RAN’s Australian Maritime Operations doctrine publication. He also works with the Centre for Ocean Resources and Security at Wollongong University.

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