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Sailing New Seas: Naval War College Newport Papers 13
Contributor(s): Freymann, David G. (Author), Press, Naval War College (Author), Reason, U. S. Navy Admiral J. Paul (Author)
ISBN: 1479138495     ISBN-13: 9781479138494
Publisher: Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
OUR PRICE:   $10.44  
Product Type: Paperback
Published: August 2012
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- History | Military - Naval
Physical Information: 0.23" H x 6" W x 9" (0.35 lbs) 112 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
This Naval War College Newport paper, Sailing New Seas, presents the ideas of one of the Navy's most senior leaders. Admiral Reason's topic is the course the United States Navy should steer in the "typhoon of change" characterizing today's and tomorrow's world. He begins by describing what the technological, managerial, and social hurricane of the Information Age means for warriors who go to sea. He then addresses, in general terms and in specifics, the response such an upheaval requires. While acknowledging the traditions that made the Navy great, Admiral Reason proposes a new way to think about the fleet as a whole, one that discards the "industrial age model" in favor of the "flight deck paradigm" of a high-performance organization operating at the edge of chaos. He concludes by stressing the importance of rapid adaptability to the Navy's paramount measure of performance-warfighting. This is an insightful blending of the implications of the "trans-industrial age" to future warfare, the criticality of data, the relevance of an extraordinary naval model of leadership, and the requirement for a new mind-set in the United States Navy. It is a brief essay, because the author recognizes that quickness and individual initiative are far more important than "top-down direction" and "the voice of experience" in readying today's Navy for tomorrow's challenges. "The task at hand," he writes, "is to lever the Navy from the Industrial Age to the trans-industrial age, using data-based arguments to increase the efficiency and quickness with which it accomplishes its missions."