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ID133408
Title ProperNetworking the global maritime partnership
LanguageENG
AuthorHszieh, Stephanie ;  Galdorisi, George ;  McKearney, Terry ;  Sutton, Darren
Publication2012.
Summary / Abstract (Note)Six years after Admiral Michael Mullen, then Chief of Naval Operations, proposed his "thousand-ship navy" concept at the Seventeenth International Seapower Symposium at the U.S. Naval War College in 2005, his notion of a Global Maritime Partnership is gaining increasing currency within, between, and among navies.1 As the Chief of Naval Operations, Admiral Gary Roughead, noted in his remarks at the Nineteenth International Seapower Symposium in 2009, navies worldwide are working mightily to enhance cooperation and interoperability on the global commons.2 Real-world operations, especially in the Pacific Rim, have demonstrated that networking maritime forces is crucial to the effectiveness of operations that run the gamut from humanitarian operations to dealing with insurgencies, to nation-building, to state-on-state conflict. Additionally, these operations often involve nations and navies that come together on short-or no-notice, and, as a necessary condition for success in these operations, this networking must be immediately available and robust.
`In' analytical NoteNaval War College Review Vol.65, No.2; Spr.2012: p.11-29
Journal SourceNaval War College Review Vol.65, No.2; Spr.2012: p.11-29
Key WordsGlobal Maritime Partnership - GMP ;  Maritime Partnership ;  Maritime Cooperation ;  Maritime Networking ;  Naval Operations ;  International Seapower Symposium - ISPS ;  Seapower Symposium ;  Real-World Operations ;  Enhance Cooperation ;  State-On-State Conflict ;  Pacific Rim ;  United States - US ;  Naval Conflict


 
 
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