. The Ladies' home journal. Muchof the continuing failure of both the Armyand the Navy in antisubmarine mattersrose out of the absence of any central andclear-cut command. At least until 1943 theNavy Department was not organized as wasthe British Admiralty, with a vigorous andindependent group of senior officers con-ducting antisubmarine warfare as a con-tinuous campaign. There was no officer whocould be held responsible for that missionand only that one; antisubmarine warfare,both in the Navy Department and in theArmys high command, was everyones busi-ness and no ones. And if General Arnoldso


. The Ladies' home journal. Muchof the continuing failure of both the Armyand the Navy in antisubmarine mattersrose out of the absence of any central andclear-cut command. At least until 1943 theNavy Department was not organized as wasthe British Admiralty, with a vigorous andindependent group of senior officers con-ducting antisubmarine warfare as a con-tinuous campaign. There was no officer whocould be held responsible for that missionand only that one; antisubmarine warfare,both in the Navy Department and in theArmys high command, was everyones busi-ness and no ones. And if General Arnoldsofficers were thinking largely of strategicair power, Admiral Kings were concernedmainly with the Pacific. With rare excep-tions, antisubmarine warfare received onlythe partial attention of the first-rate officers,while actual operations, especially in the^ea frontiers, were left to commanders notalways chosen from the top drawer. Compar-ing this arrangement with the method ap(Continued on Page 210) LADIES SOME JOl l!\ \ »ith BO 90 t\va&vC again Qvocolate Bits/


Size: 1747px × 1431px
Photo credit: © Reading Room 2020 / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, bookidladieshomejourna65janwyet