This book discusses the role of the U.S. Navy within the country's national security structure during the first decade of the Cold War from the perspective of the service's senior uniformed officer, the Chief of Naval Operations, and his staff. It examines a variety of important issues of the period, including the Army-Navy fight over unification that led to the creation of the National Security Act of 1947, the early postwar fighting in China between the Nationalists and the Communists, the formation of NATO, the outbreak of the Korean War, the decision of the Eisenhower Administration not to intervene in the Viet Minh troops' siege of the French garrison at Dien Bien Phu, and the initiation of the Eisenhower "New Look" defense policy. The author relies upon information obtained from a wide range of primary sources and personal interviews with important, senior Navy and Army officers. The result is a book that provides the reader with a new way of looking at these pivotal events.

eBook - ePub
From Hot War to Cold
The U.S. Navy and National Security Affairs, 1945-1955
- 728 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
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CHAPTER 1
Wartime Organizational Changes in the Office of the Chief of Naval Operations1
At 0900 on 2 September 1945, at a mess table placed on the starboard veranda deck of the battleship Missouri (BB 63) anchored in Tokyo Bay, General of the Army Douglas MacArthur opened the ceremony at which the Imperial Government of Japan surrendered to the Allied Powers. Four minutes later, at 0904, Japanese Foreign Minister Shigemitsu Mamoru signed the instrument of surrender, bringing the Second World Warâa war of unparalleled scope and horrorâofficially to a close.2
The many observers to the scene on board Missouri could look across Tokyo Bay and see it filled with Allied men-of-war and auxiliaries of almost every type and size from capital ships to landing ships and craft.3 For U.S. Navy officers in attendance, the surrender ceremony in the presence of so much naval might proved a moving occasion. Just as the surrender formalities concluded, American aircraft in massed formations began a flyover of the bay. Admiral William F. Halsey, Jr., Commander Third Fleet, recalled:
I had been called up to stand behind the chair while [Fleet Admiral] Chester [W.] Nimitz was signing for the United States. We had a mass flight of about 400 planes from Task Force 38 in the offing, waiting to come over the MISSOURI at my command. I had asked General MacArthur to please give me the word when he wanted them brought over. He whispered in my ear, âStart âem now.â The word was passed over the radio phone to the flight and they made a beautiful and impressive sight as they came over the ships.4
On this propitious day, the United States Navy stood at the zenith of its wartime strengthânaval power that is difficult to comprehend fully in the early 21st century. As Britainâs Royal Navy had stood astride the worldâs oceans as the supreme naval power in November 1918, so now the U.S. Navy was supreme. Having fought in the varied theaters of the warâin the Atlantic and the Mediterranean in collaboration with its British and Canadian counterparts, in the Pacific, largely aloneâit had suffered serious initial losses, had learned from many of its mistakes, and ultimately had triumphed against German and Japanese navies that had fought with considerable skill and courage.
The U.S. Navy possessed 1,166 major combatant ships on VJ day, including 23 battleships, 28 aircraft carriers (CVs and CVLs), 71 escort carriers, 73 cruisers, 380 destroyers, and 234 submarines.5 It was a fleet the power of which surpassed that of any navy the world had yet seen. Nonetheless, it was suddenly a wasting asset in the new days of peace stretching ahead, and within a few months it would be reduced to a fraction of its fighting strength by the effects of demobilization. This sudden turn from war to peace was conveyed aptly by the words of Admiral Nimitz, which were transmitted by radio throughout the Pacific and the United States following the surrender ceremony, âNow we turn to the great tasks of reconstruction and restoration.â6
OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF NAVAL OPERATIONS
In December 1941, the Chief of Naval Operations was Admiral Harold R. âBettyâ Stark. A 1903 graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy who had risen in the service as a line officer with a specialty in ordnance, he had commanded four destroyers in succession from 1909 to 1915. In the interwar period as a member of the âGun Clubâ (an appellation given to those who specialized in ordnance and gunnery), Stark had held a variety of responsible positions, including serving as an aide to Navy Secretaries Charles Francis Adams and Claude A. Swanson. After commanding the battleship West Virginia (BB 48), he had spent almost three years as Chief of the Bureau of Ordnance (BUORD).7
In early 1939, Admiral William Leahy had only a few months remaining in his term as CNO. Accordingly, Secretary of the Navy Swanson submitted five possible slates for new flag officer assignments to President Franklin D. Roosevelt. One of these combinations had Rear Admiral James O. Richardson, Chief of the Bureau of Navigation, for CNO, while another had Rear Admiral Stark in that position. President Roosevelt eventually decided on a slate that had Stark as CNO and Richardson as Commander Battle Force (to fleet up to Commander in Chief U.S. Fleet after six months).8 On 22 March 1939, the President wrote to Stark, whom he had known since Rooseveltâs days as Assistant Secretary of the Navy, âIt will be grand to have you here as C.N.O. As in the case of Bill Leahy, you and I talk the same language.â9 Admiral Stark assumed office as CNO on 1 August 1939. As CNO, Stark exhibited the same traits he had shown earlier in his career. Innately modest and considerate of his subordinates, he possessed a great capacity for hard work. His tact and political sensitivity, gained during his tours as a naval aide and as BUORD chief, made him an effective advocate of the Navy in the White House and in testifying before Congress.10
By regulation, the Chief of Naval Operations, under the direction of the Secretary of the Navy, was charged with âthe operations of the fleet and with the preparation and readiness of plans for its use in war.â11 The CNOâs duties included the direction of all strategic and tactical matters, organization of the fleet, maneuvers, gunnery competitions, drills and exercises, and the training of the fleet for war. Under the Secretaryâs direction, the CNO also was responsible for directing âthe movements and operations of vessels of the Navy, including the time of their assignment for docking, repairs, and alterations . . .â12
In late 1941, the most serious concern over the role of the Chief of Naval Operations continued to be his relationship with the technical bureaus and the independent offices in the Navy Department. The CNO took precedence over the Navy Departmentâs bureau chiefs and the heads of its independent offices by virtue of his rank, yet he was not their superior and was not a link in the chain of command between the chiefs and the Secretary of the Navy.13 Even though the CNO possessed important coordinative powers over all naval activities by virtue of his authority to operate the fleet in peace and war, this coordination had to be effected through careful and patient effort at achieving cooperation with the bureaus.14
The Office of the Chief of Naval Operationsâformerly the Office of Naval Operationsâconsisted of the immediate office of the CNO and eleven divisions in December 1941.15 These divisions included War Plans (Op-12), Central (Op-13), Naval Intelligence (Op-16), Communication (Op-20), Fleet Training (Op-22), and Ship Movements (Op-38).16
The CNO, the Personal Aide to the CNO, and the Assistant Chief of Naval Operations were part of the immediate office of the Chief of Naval Operations, along with certain other officers who were assigned administrative duties. The Assistant CNO was next in authority to the CNO, serving in a manner similar to a chief of staff to a fleet commander in chief, relieving the Chief of Naval Operations of administrative details and considering all questions of administration or policy proposed by the OPNAV division directors before such matters were referred to the CNO.17
The War Plans Division in late 1941 was divided into three sectionsâthe Policy and Projects Section, the Plans Section, and the Latin American Defense Section. The Policy and Projects Section was responsible for developing policies and projects in support of war plans and for collaborating with the War Department in preparation of current plans for joint action of the Army and Navy. The Plans Sectionâs responsibilities included the direction of war planning, the preparation of designated war plans, and collaboration with the War Department in preparation of Joint Basic War Plans.18
One of the divisionâs most influential activities in the last years before World War II was its preparation of the Annual Estimate of the Situation, which specified in some detail âthe yearly degree of progress to be made in many of the âStandards of Readinessâ in the War Plans.â19 By the late 1930s, the Navyâs budgetary planning flowed directly from the Annual Estimate. In addition to his OPNAV responsibilities, the director of the War Plans Division served as a member of the Joint Board, the Army-Navy body that met to discuss and reach common understandings on issues requiring cooperation between the two services.20
The Central Division, which was under the Assistant CNO, served largely as an immediate staff for the CNO âfor coordination of effort with respect to policy and current plans.â21 Its duties included handling matters of international affairs (including treaties), legislation, regulations and organization, and reports and statements, such as the CNOâs annual report.22 By virtue of its international affairs responsibilities, the Central Division served as OPNAVâs liaison with the State Department.
The Naval Intelligence Division collected, evaluated, and disseminated information pertaining to the political, military, naval, economical, and industrial policies and conditions of the United States and foreign countries, and with the preservation of this information for ready reference and historical purposes.23 The divisionâs intelligence responsibilities were limited in two respects, however. It had no responsibility for radio intelligence, which fell under the cognizance of the Communications Division. Also, on oral instructions from the CNO, the division had no responsibility for evaluating or disseminating certain important aspects of military intelligence, such as preparing analyses of enemy intentions (i.e., developing the âEnemy Intentionsâ section of the Estimate of the Situation). 24 Intelligence evaluation was a de facto prerogative that the War Plans Division jealously guarded in late 1941.25
The Communications Division had control over naval communications by all means, including radio, telegraph, telephone, cable, and visual signals. It was also responsible for radio intelligence and securityâits Communication Security Section was in charge of preparing and issuing codes, ciphers, and signal books for the Navy. In late 1941, however, the interception, decryption, and analysis of foreign radio communications were perhaps the most important of the Divisionâs responsibilities.
The Fleet Training Division embraced all phases of fleet training, including fleet exercises and gunnery and engineering competitions.26 Its Tactics Section was headed by the assistant director of the division. Among its responsibilities were the preparation of general instructions for the conduct of fleet problems, special fleet tactical exercises, and fleet landing exercises. It also prepared and revised tactical publications issued by the CNO.27
The Ship Movements Division was responsible for supervising and coordinating the movements of all naval craft and aircraft, except specially designated units exclusively for training and experimental purposes. It prepared and revised the Operating Fo...
Table of contents
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Dedication
- Table of Contents
- Acknowledgments
- A Note on Transliteration
- Introduction
- CHAPTER 1 - Wartime Organizational Changes in the Office of the Chief of Naval Operations
- CHAPTER 2 - Initial Challenges: Postwar and Demobilization Planning
- CHAPTER 3 - The Navy and Unification
- CHAPTER 4 - The National Security Act Achieved
- CHAPTER 5 - Preparing for a New Enemy
- CHAPTER 6 - War Ends in the Pacific
- CHAPTER 7 - Troubles Emerge in Postwar China, 1945â1946
- CHAPTER 8 - Assessing and Responding to the Soviet Naval Threat
- CHAPTER 9 - Adjusting to the National Military Establishment
- CHAPTER 10 - Living in âInteresting Timesâ
- CHAPTER 11 - Slugging It Out on Capitol Hill
- CHAPTER 12 - Events in the Western Pacific
- CHAPTER 13 - Troubles on the Korean Peninsula
- CHAPTER 14 - Deciding to Fight
- CHAPTER 15 - Defending NATO Europe: Planning During the Initial Stages
- CHAPTER 16 - The Eisenhower National Security Structure
- CHAPTER 17 - Rethinking National Strategy
- CHAPTER 18 - Coping with the New Look
- CHAPTER 19 - A Crisis Abroad and a CNOâs Departure
- Conclusion
- Reference Matter
- Bibliography
- Index
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