1st Edition

Great Power Strategy in Asia Empire, Culture and Trade, 1905-2005

By Jonathan Bailey Copyright 2007
    324 Pages
    by Routledge

    320 Pages
    by Routledge

    Great Power Strategy in Asia, 1905-2005 analyzes the enduring themes underlying the strategic struggles in East Asia, beginning with the crucial event of the 1904-5 Russo-Japanese War.

    Jonathan Bailey clearly shows why military history is highly relevant in understanding today’s strategic problems, and how the most important areas of current affairs have their roots in often forgotten corners of military history. He makes his powerful case in three clear sections:

    • an analysis of the explosive factors that led to war between Russia and Japan in 1904, presenting a ten-year perspective of the War, focusing on its consequences: cultural shock in ‘the West’, re-alignment of Asian imperial geography and the failure to learn vital military lessons, as World War I approached
    • a thirty-five year perspective of the war, showing why Japan repeated the essential strategic, operational and tactical ploys of its war against Russia in 1904 in its strike upon the USA in 1941. Allied victory assured the downfall of Europe’s empires in Asia, with the USA inheriting much of the old imperial legacy
    • a centennial view of the Russo-Japanese War, which demonstrates that many of the broader issues identifiable in 1904-05 remain at the heart of today’s strategic discourse: Western apprehension about the economic rise of Japan; the anomalies of an ‘American Empire’; tensions between Occident and Orient; the apparent new relevance of geopolitics; and the importance of demography in perceptions of global power.

    This book is multidisciplinary, emphasizing the linkages between imperial power-politics, military operations, cultural conflict and commercial rivalry. It is also the story of military innovation, the pathology of learning lessons from the experience of war, and the anticipated rise of Asian, or more specifically Chinese, power a century after the false dawn of the Japanese victory in 1905.

    This book will be of great interest to all students of the Russo-Japanese War, Asian security, and of military and strategic studies.

    Introduction  Part 1: The Russo-Japanese War. A Ten-Year Perspective  1. Portents: Strategy: Racial and Commercial Dynamics/ Military Omens  2. The Experience of 1904-5  3. 1905: The Future of War. A Ten Year Perspective  Part 2: From Port Arthur to Pearl Harbour: A Thirty-Five-Year Perspective  4. Grand Strategy: Racial Angst and Diplomatic Odyssey  5. Military Strategy: The Paradox of Inevitability and Surprise  6. Tactics and Technology: Novelty Repeated  Part 3: Imperial Tectonics: The Plates Shift. A Centennial Perspective  7. Europe Bows Out  8. Asia on the March  9. America Advances  10. Nippon Resurgat  11. The Next Hundred Years: Chinese Futures  12. Conclusion: Centennial Themes.  References.  Index

    Biography

    Jonathan Bailey retired from the British Army in 2005 as a major general. His last appointment was Director General Development and Doctrine, responsible for analysing the future strategic environment and the concepts, doctrine, structures and procurement requirements of the British Army, 2010-2030. He is the author of Field Artillery and Firepower (1989), The First World War and the Birth of the Modern Style of Warfare (Strategic and Combat Studies Institute, 1996), and Field Artillery and Firepower (Naval Institute Press, 2004). He is the current Director of the Centre for Defence and International Security Studies (CDISS).