January 28, 2026

Naval Gazing Book Club - The Two-Ocean War

Inspired by some discussion in the Discord, I'm going to try something new, a book club readthrough of Samuel Eliot Morison's The Two-Ocean War, his single-volume history of the USN in WWII. It's a condensed version of his 14-volume History of US Naval Operations in WWII, an excellent work that is probably a bit too long for most people. Now, because even the "short" version is nearly 600 pages, I'm going to set the schedule of one chapter per week, which should average around 30 pages. I'll put up a discussion post each Wednesday with my thoughts (although I am going to do my best not to do very much research outside of reading the book) and everyone is free to comment. The first post, on Chapter 1, The Twenty Years' Peace, will go up on February 4th, a week from today. If you're interested, you can get the book here (Amazon affiliate link) and we'll see how this goes.

February 15, 2026

Exotic Hulls Part 7 - Round Ships

I've previously covered a number of different exotic hull configurations in use today. But there have been a few from the distant past worth noting, most prominently the attempt by the Russians to build ships with circular hulls.


Admiral Andrei Popov

The story of these ships has its origins in the 1860s, when Russia was forbidden by the treaty that ended the Crimean War from operating more than half a dozen 800-ton1 coastal defense ships in the Black Sea. This was pretty small, particularly with the advent of ironclads, and thought soon turned to how to get the most out of this tonnage. It was clearly not enough for any conventional ironclad that could be competitive with vessels laid down by possible enemies like Turkey and Austria, so one Russian officer, Andrei Popov, proposed something radical. He had noticed that ironclads were generally growing shorter relative to their beam, as this made it more efficient to carry armor on a given displacement. Taken to its logical conclusion, a circular vessel would make most efficient use of armor, and while this would probably not be great for seakeeping or speed, a few small test boats worked well enough and it would also minimize draft, a serious concern for vessels designed to work in the shallow waters of the Crimean coast. Read more...

February 13, 2026

Open Thread 189

It is time once again for our regular Open Thread. Talk about whatever you want, so long as it isn't culture war.

Overhauls are Russian Battleships Part 2, Carrier Doom Part 3, Early US Battleships, Ship Structure and Strength, Squalus, The Pre-Battlecruisers, Hornet Part 2 and for 2025, The 2024 Brown Award Post, We need to talk about ship names and reader Alex's review of the RAF Museum Cosford.

February 11, 2026

Naval Gazing Book Club - Two-Ocean War Ch2

Probably the biggest limitation on Two-Ocean War's battle history is the fact that ULTRA, the British program to decrypt and disseminate German Enigma traffic, was not declassified until a decade after it was written. This shows up early in this chapter, where it talks about the futility of hunting groups as opposed to convoys. In fact, hunting groups were used, particularly in the spectacularly successful campaign against the German U-boat tankers in 1943. More broadly, the questions of the appropriate strategy against submarines is a complicated one, and the fact that WWI and WWII came to similar answers is somewhat coincidental. (If you want more on this, there's a good summary in Norman Friedman's new Cold War Anti-Submarine Warfare.)

Also worth commenting briefly on is that, yeah, in retrospect the fall of France was pretty improbable. The German generals who told Hitler it would be a disaster were, by conventional lights, quite right, and it wouldn't have taken all that much for it to actually be a disaster. But instead, France fell, and we got the war as we now know it.

Beyond that, we're seeing Morison's tendency (with one notable exception) to lionize American figures on full display here. King is also famous as "the most even-tempered man in the Navy - always in a rage", which doesn't really come across in the description. He was definitely a competent and effective admiral, but I don't think Morison's superlatives are entirely deserved.

On the Pacific side, there's more of the same problems that showed up in the first chapter. I will note, for instance, that his count of fleet strength doesn't include Repulse and Prince of Wales at Singapore, or the Dutch and Australian cruisers in the southwest Pacific. His evaluation of Yamamoto's strategy is also off. The basic outline is not difficult to follow given modern sources. Yamamoto was trying to deliver a major shock to the US in hopes of forcing us out of the war, and, failing that, to give Japan time to expand and fortify her perimeter. I don't think his account of the politics on Japan's side is much better, but it's been a while since I read much on this. If anyone is interested in a recent and quite readable book on this, I'd recommend Tower of Skulls by Richard B Frank (Amazon affiliate link).

Despite my criticisms, I think this chapter was an improvement on the last one. The Atlantic side was the first time we've seen Morison's genius for describing the operational side of things, and next time out, we'll get his account of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, which will play far more to the book's strengths.

February 08, 2026

Museum Review - Museum of Flight

As regular readers know, I'm a big fan of air museums, and have been to (and reviewed) almost all of the major air museums in the US. The last really big one that I hadn't been to was the Museum of Flight in Seattle, and on a recent visit there to see family, I finally made it, and quite enjoyed what I found.

Type: Large air museum
Location: Seattle, Washington
Rating: A good museum if not a great one
Price: $29 for normal adults

Website

I should probably start by saying that the Museum of Flight isn't really one museum. It's more like three or four different museums in a trenchcoat, all stuck together on a campus near Boeing Field in Renton, south of downtown Seattle, which is also the home of the 737 production line.2 There's a pretty cool collection of warbirds from both World Wars, a very neat exhibit inside the Red Barn that served as Boeing's first factory on how early airplanes were built, an uninspiring space museum and a somewhat random collection of other planes, both indoors and out, that definitely showed the museum's connection with Seattle's biggest airplane company. But there's not a lot of coherence here, and the campus layout is even more obviously the result of a staged expansion than the Stafford Museum, the previous holder of the title. Read more...

February 04, 2026

Naval Gazing Book Club - Two-Ocean War Ch1

Today is the first chapter of our book club for Samuel Eliot Morison's The Two-Ocean War, a history of the USN in WWII. The first chapter, The Twenty Years' Peace, covers the interwar years, and as usual, I'll kick off by sharing my thoughts on the chapter:


This is a chapter that has not held up very well to the last 60 years of naval history, probably because it is a very different type of history from the rest of this book. Understanding the broad sweep of events in peacetime is very different and more difficult than describing a battle in war, and Morison was still writing in an era when many of the players were still alive and grinding axes. In particular, views on the naval treaties have shifted radically, and you'd be hard-pressed to find a serious historian today who doesn't think that they were on the whole probably a good thing for all involved, because they kept a major naval race from kicking off in the early 20s and gave navies a target to build to during the Depression. There's also a general downplaying of the interwar USN that doesn't seem particularly coherent or match more recent works I've read. It's probably easier to see flaws when you're still that close to events, and bitter that the Navy didn't get more money in the 1930s. I suspect this is based on the introduction, written by Dudley Knox, to Vol 1 of History of US Naval Operations, and it suffers from a lot of the same flaws. Also, it's pretty clear that Morison is allowing his friendship with Roosevelt to color his evaluation of FDR's presidency. (That's how he got the job writing the history of the USN, for anyone who doesn't know.) For one thing, Roosevelt didn't really begin a serious naval buildup until after the Fall of France, 5 years after the Japanese withdrew from the treaty structure. His policy before that was far less clear than is often painted in retrospect, and Morison isn't alone in this.

A couple of technical fact-checks: The 1930 London Treaty did impose tonnage limits on smaller ships, contrary to what Morison claims, and it appears that Earl Ellis died of alcoholism, not Japanese perfidy. And Anglo-American relations were nowhere near as calm and certain in the 10s and 20s as Morison makes out. Also, I spent a few minutes looking into his comments on Hoover, which are true as far as they go, but seem to have been more because Hoover was vaguely interested in disarmament and very distracted by domestic affairs than by the sort of specific animus Morison ascribes to him.

All that said, I expect things to improve as we get deeper into the book. Next week is Chapter 2, Short of War, covering the period before America's entry into WWII.

Relevant Naval Gazing posts:

February 01, 2026

Carrier Operations Part 4

The practice of operating aircraft at sea evolved rapidly from the earliest days of naval aviation through the introduction of the true aircraft carrier immediately after WWI, and was refined as more navies got into the game in the 20s. These in turn formed the basis of carrier operations through 1945, although some changes were necessary, largely to deal with the increasing weight of aircraft through the 1930s.


T4Ms (back) and F3Bs on a carrier deck, c.1930

The typical carrier aircraft of 1930 was a biplane, relatively light and with a lots of wing area to generate lift. For instance, an American air wing might be composed of Boeing F2Bs (gross weight 2,805 lb, wing loading 11.5 lbs/ft2), Vought O2Us (gross weight 3,635 lb, wing loading 11.4 lbs/ft2) and Martin T4Ms (gross weight 8,071 lbs, wing loading 12.3 lbs/ft2). But by 1941, the same carrier would be carrying an all-monoplane wing of Grumman F4Fs (gross weight 7,423 lb, wing loading 28.6 lbs/ft2), Douglas SBDs (gross weight 10,855 lb, wing loading 33.4 lbs/ft2) and TBDs (gross weight 10,194 lb, wing loading 24.2 lb/ft2). To an extremely rough approximation, takeoff and landing speeds scale with the square root of wing loading, so the 1941 air group would need to be going 40-70% faster than their predecessors of a decade earlier to take off or land. In practice, this requirement was mitigated somewhat by the switch from biplanes to monoplanes, which are more aerodynamically efficient, and the adoption of high-lift devices like flaps and slats that allowed the aircraft to stall at lower speeds.3 Despite this, they still would require stronger arresting gear and more room for takeoff, limiting the number of airplanes that could operate from a given ship. Read more...

January 25, 2026

Jet Fighter Generations Part 2 - Third and Fourth Generations

Today, we continue reader Michael Tint's series on the history of the jet fighter, cataloging the changes that came with each generation of aircraft. He previously covered generations 1 and 2, the subsonic and early supersonic aircraft.


Gen 3


An F-4 Phantom, the definitive Gen 3 jet fighter

The 1960s saw the emergence of Gen3 fighters, marking the moment electronics ceased to be accessories and became the heart of the aircraft’s design. As radars became mandatory for tracking and radar guided missiles became the primary means of engagement, the fighter demanded more. More internal volume to house powerful radars and electronics, more hardpoints to carry more and bigger missiles, more thrust to keep up the speed, and more fuel to keep it all going. This is the era when the nimble dogfighter of old was replaced by the complex integrated weapons platform. Read more...

January 18, 2026

The 2025 William D Brown Memorial Award

With 2025 behind us, we can look back on the year and figure out who deserves that most prestigious of Naval Gazing awards, the William D Brown Memorial Award for the biggest naval screwup that didn't kill anyone.

Compared to last year, our crop of entries is slightly down, although one navy in particular seems determined to win a third award on the trot:

Read more...

January 16, 2026

Open Thread 188

It's time once again for our regular Open Thread. Talk about whatever you want, so long as it isn't Culture War.

I've had to close signups for Dayton, as we are at about the maximum number of people I can reasonably handle during the tour. Sorry for those who missed out, and hope to see you somewhere in a future year.

Overhauls are A Spotter's Guide to Warships of the World Wars, Bringing Back the Battleships, New Year's Logs, SYWTBABB Leftovers Part 1, NWAS Cruise Missiles Part 2, the Ticonderoga Class and for 2024-2025, US Military Aircraft Part 5, John Olson's review of Danish Cold War fortifications, The Displacement of a Long-Hull Perry and Abstractions in Defense Analysis.

January 11, 2026

The Beira Patrol

In the 1960s, as the British Empire came to an end, one of the great challenges faced by London was Rhodesia. It was ruled by white settlers, like several of Britain's African colonies, but uniquely, maneuvering by the colony's founder and namesake, Cecil Rhodes, had left it almost entirely self-governing. This greatly limited Britain's ability to bring Africans into the government, and any attempt to do so would push Rhodesia into declaring independence or possibly joining South Africa, already deep in the grip of apartheid. Negotiations dragged on through the early 60s, but no solution could be reached, and in 1965, Rhodesia unilaterally declared independence, although they completely failed to gain international recognition.


HMS Plymouth intercepts a tanker during the patrol

This left Britain with a problem. Most of the former colonies were now independent and had joined the Commonwealth, which London saw as a useful means of exerting soft power. But such organizations work both ways, and the presence of a white-dominated regime on territory that legally belonged to Britain was something that the former colonies were not prepared to tolerate, and they demanded that Britain do something. Rhodesia was landlocked, and the main connections to the outside world ran through either South Africa, which was increasingly hostile to Britain and friendly to the regime and had promised to be the second country to recognize them, or through Mozambique, still a Portuguese colony that Lisbon was trying desperately to hold on to. That meant direct intervention was out, and the British instead announced comprehensive sanctions, less because they expected them to work, particularly with Portugal and South Africa flatly refusing to cooperate, than because it was the only thing they could do at a reasonable cost. Read more...