132 
Navies in War and Peace—Table of Contents—Continued 
Number 
Title heads of words 
The German and English Navies in the War __________________ 1,345 
The Battle of Jutland __________ ow. VEL Ae tO PORE eee 200 
Unrestricted Submarine Warfare _________________________- 1,145 
The Russiany Navy inithe: Wares 454i ee, ee ee 745 
Some Conclusions on the Influence of Navies on the Course of 
the: Weare... 3s 4 cess lo gay Sk ee 1,825 
EX. "Whe SOViet INAV so ee ee ees oe ee epee 9,115 
The Fleet in the October Revolution __________________________ 560 
The Navy—an Indispensable and Integral Part of the First Social- 
ist; Statehinithe (Worlds2-3 4 < efctefal ate hei hy OA a eee 320 
The Leninist Principles of Soviet Military Science _____________- 1,240 
Navy Menwin, the Civil Wate je 8 ook ee a ee 1,660 
The Development of the Soviet Navy _-2_- =.= __ 5-228 aes 5,335 
Restoration of the Navy, 1921-2822 ~- ee 925 
The Building of the Navy, 1928-41 ______________________ 4,410 
X> TheSecond World) Wario 42a ann hh See eS eee 4,565 
Preparation for: War taqss ay tise ill t 1 5aph. ey soe 715 
The Role of the Navies in the Second World War and Their Effect 
on the Course and Outcome of the War ______________________ 3,850 
XI: The Soviet Navy in’ the Great Patriotic War 22-22 2-3) 32 eee 3,700 
XII. The Basic Tasks Discharged by Navies During the Second World War __ 4,840 
(Introductory section); 22 c2. hs ee 160 
The Battle of [Sea] Communications __________________________ 2,725 
Landing, Operations 9) Yo SY eo Pi eR Sh ae 485 
Destruction of the Enemy’s Battle Groups ___________________- 295 
(Review of Individual Type Roles) ___________________________- 685 
(Gonclusions)'si4 26 <3 Aine see oe eet a ee eee 490 
XIII. Navies as an Instrument of the Aggressive Policy of the Imperialist 
States\in Peacetime 22 se ty 5 ee eee ees eee eee 4,488 
(Main discussion) << <4 seer sence weet oe eee eee 32555 
(Concluding paragraphs on the Soviet Navy’s peacetime role) _____- 933 
XIV. Some Problems in Mastering the World Oceans ____________________ 2,655 
XV. Problems of the Contemporary Navy ___________________________-_- 4,000 
(Main discussion) 22 S4 Bt. Ae ee Si. SO... eae 3,480 
(Concluding paragraphs); 2s... 2. _ See seh st eee tio Renee 520 
Approximate, total -_ _. 2. Soe 36 See Seis oneeney eee 54,000 
THE NAVY AND SOVIET OCEANS POLICY 
“Oceans Policy” is an evocative but imprecise term, which I take 
to mean some overall and reasonably coherent long-term national 
strategy concerning the use of the sea and its resources. In Western 
states, such policies are conspicuous by their absence. Has the Soviet 
Union, with its central planning process, managed to do any better 
in this respect, and where does the navy fit into the picture? 
The sea is used variously for the conveyance of goods and people, 
for the projection of military power, as a source of living and non- 
living resources, as an international garbage dump, and as the landing 
area for space flights and missile tests. Ocean science research is 
conducted to further these uses. Navies, besides participating directly 
in the projection of military power, are used to secure or prevent 
these uses. There is inherent conflict between the enjoyment of these 
uses by different states, and also between the uses themselves. 
