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Vincent P. O'Hara was born and reared in San Diego, California, where he developed his life-long enthusiasm for naval history. He holds a history degree from the University of California, Berkeley, and is a business consultant, researcher, and cartographer

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MHQ: The Quarterly Journal of Military History — Winter 2009 (2008) — Author "The Unintended Revolution" — 9 Exemplare
MHQ: The Quarterly Journal of Military History — Summer 2009 (2009) — Author "Ask MHQ" — 9 Exemplare
MHQ: The Quarterly Journal of Military History — Summer 2005 (2005) — Author "The Battles of Buenos Aires" — 7 Exemplare
MHQ: The Quarterly Journal of Military History — Autumn 2006 (2006) — Author "Ironclad Huascar's Mastery in the Guano War" — 3 Exemplare

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I have rated this book 4 stars because of how well researched and detailed it is. If you are interested in naval world war two history, I think you will thoroughly enjoy this book. However, while I know a lot about WW2 I am not familiar with a lot of naval terms so I found it quite difficult to follow at times and I had to read it slowly. This book made me feel very ignorant at first but I know a lot more about the Mediterranean battles after finishing it.
 
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ChariseH | 1 weitere Rezension | May 25, 2024 |
Excellent. This is how you write a short pictorial ship monograph. Prinz Eugen is described from building to demise as an atomic target. The ship is placed within the context of heavy cruisers of other nations with its pros and cons. The operational history is tight yet complete (especially the less covered 1945 period of shore bombardment.
 
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SPQR2755 | May 23, 2024 |
Though overshadowed by the larger battles in the Atlantic and the Pacific, the conflict in the Mediterranean, as Vincent O’Hara states in the beginning of this book, was “World War II’s longest air-land-sea campaign,” one that involved five of the world’s six largest navies. His book, an account of the clash between the surface forces, offers a balanced examination of the conflict that corrects many of the misconceptions which clutter our understanding of the conflict there. What emerges is a very different take on the war in the Mediterranean, one that provides far better insight into how the war developed and changed as a result.

Foremost among the myths that O’Hara pursues is that of Italian incompetence, which he dispels convincingly by noting their success in achieving their primary strategic objectives throughout most of the war, as well as the tenacious challenge they posed to the British. Though the Germans are traditionally seen as the Axis power which did the bulk of the heavy lifting in the region, O’Hara disputes this as well, noting that the Kriegsmarine’s combat performance there was in fact inferior to that of the much-disparaged Regia Marina. Nor are the British and French spared from O’Hara’s revisionary analysis, as he makes a strong case for the French fleet’s ongoing effort to preserve their nation’s sovereignty while arguing that the British only triumphed in the Mediterranean as a result of the infusion of American forces into the region in the fall of 1942.

O’Hara’s points are presented in a convincing and forthright manner, one that aids the book in challenging traditional attitudes about the war there. Yet it suffers from two significant flaws. The first is O’Hara’s focus on the surface actions, a curious decision which marginalizes vital components of the sea war. Even the famous air raid on the Italian naval base on Taranto, one of the turning points of naval history, is addressed in a mere two sentences that offer little consideration of the broader impact of the raid. O’Hara’s almost exclusive reliance upon secondary and published sources is the other major limitation of his work, as his trodding of ground well covered by others limits the real novelty of his argument. Such deficiencies limit the impact of what is otherwise a provocative reexamination of the war in the Mediterranean, one that every student of naval conflict in the Second World War can read for enjoyment as well as enlightenment.
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MacDad | 1 weitere Rezension | Mar 27, 2020 |
As is the case of most of O'Hara's studies the particular attraction is the detailed examination of the operational matters at hand that he provides. This is certainly the most careful accounting I have yet seen of how the French defended their neutrality, and it was a sufficiently stiff fight that one is grateful that there was no emergency effort to crash Northwest Europe in 1942; it would have simply been a bigger Dieppe. This is not to say that the critics of a Mediterranean adventure didn't have a point, as nothing short of full-fledged assault on France was really going to do the job of beating the Germans, but sometimes you have no good options.

Another plus of this book, because O'Hara takes the French seriously, is to consider what the real French options were, whereupon the notion that Vichy should have just jumped at the Allied intervention looks much less much inviting considering the realities. As dubious as the regime of Laval and Petain now looks, one can appreciate their desire to save an at least semi-sovereign France from a full-blown Axis occupation, with all that entailed. O'Hara's further suggestion is that Admiral Darlan deserves some appreciation from a distance, as it took his influence to allow for a full-blown French participation in the liberation of France.
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Shrike58 | Feb 24, 2020 |

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