ABSTRACT

This book critically analyzes US political-military strategy by arguing that freedom of the seas discourse is fundamentally unfit for an era of maritime great power competition.

The work conducts a genealogical intellectual history of freedom of the seas discourse in US foreign policy to show how the concept has evolved over time to facilitate American control over the global ocean space. It concludes that the contemporary discourse works to establish the high seas as an arena free from claims of sovereignty so that the United States, as the presumed unrivaled naval power, can intervene globally on behalf of its national interests. However, since sea control strategies depend on a preponderance of material force, as the United States wanes in relative material capability it becomes less able to support political-military strategies predicated on the assumption of global naval dominance. The book provides a timely commentary on the current geopolitical competition between the United States and China, and critiques the US approach toward China in the maritime domain in order to highlight potential avenues of foreign policy action that may enable the two countries to mitigate the risk of conflict.

This book will be of much interest to students of naval history, maritime security, US foreign policy, and international relations.

chapter |17 pages

Introduction

part I|127 pages

19Mare Liberum

chapter 1|10 pages

Setting the Stage

chapter 2|29 pages

Charting a Course

chapter 5|42 pages

Woodrow Wilson and the First World War

part II|90 pages

147Mare Imperium

chapter 6|25 pages

The Second World War

chapter 7|23 pages

The Cold War

Part I

chapter 8|27 pages

The Cold War

Part II

chapter 9|13 pages

Post-Cold War Discourse

chapter |7 pages

Conclusion