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Nexus
Strategic Communications and American Security in World War I
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Jonathan Reed Winkler
Language:
English
Published/Copyright:
2008
About this book
In an illuminating study that blends diplomatic, military, technology, and business history, Winkler shows how U.S. officials during World War I discovered the enormous value of global communications. Winkler sheds light on the early stages of the global infrastructure that helped launch the U.S. as the predominant power of the century.
Reviews
The fight for mastery of global telecommunications in the midst of the First World War is a subject of the deepest importance that had lain undiscovered until now. Jonathan Winkler has reconstructed the complex nexus of strategy, technology, and diplomacy with admirable clarity. It is a fundamental contribution that demonstrates the need for a whole new field of historical inquiry.
-- Matthew Connelly, author of Fatal Misconception: The Struggle to Control World Population
-- Matthew Connelly, author of Fatal Misconception: The Struggle to Control World Population
In a landmark book, Winkler shows how most of the issues of the information economy--and its handmaiden, information security--were thrust upon the United States by World War I, when the nation found that British domination of the cable infrastructure, combined with London's strategic grasp of its possibilities, reduced the U.S. to a humiliating dependence. How America tried to escape from the shackles of the British monopoly on communications makes a fascinating tale.
-- Richard R. Fernandez, The Belmont Club (fallbackbelmont.blogspot.com)
-- Richard R. Fernandez, The Belmont Club (fallbackbelmont.blogspot.com)
As children of the information age, we appreciate the vital role of communications in national security planning. Jonathan Winkler takes us back to an era when the principles of informational warfare were first being thrashed out--in foreign ministries, in military headquarters, under the sea, and in the atmosphere. A fascinating tale of technology, diplomacy, and intrigue.
-- H. W. Brands, University of Texas, Austin
-- H. W. Brands, University of Texas, Austin
Winkler tells a story that should figure into all future accounts of U.S. participation in World War I.
-- Ernest R. May, Harvard University
-- Ernest R. May, Harvard University
By examining the ways in which World War I sparked official recognition of the commercial and strategic importance of cable and radio, Winkler illuminates a vital, but neglected, chapter in the history of global communications. This is a thoroughly researched, well-written, and engaging study.
-- Emily S. Rosenberg, University of California, Irvine
-- Emily S. Rosenberg, University of California, Irvine
Winkler's book provides a lesson in the evolutionary nature of technological change. Winkler explores the first global internet--the international telegraph cable system that began shrinking Planet Earth at the end of the 19th century.
-- Austin Bay austinbay.net
-- Austin Bay austinbay.net
This story involves not only the history of communication, but also diplomatic, military, technology, and business history. While investigating interrelated developments in these fields, Winkler recreates the global communication network in place at the outbreak of the war and shows how each side engaged in the first real information war. Finally, he analyzes US officials' reaction to this new warfare and the policies they adopted to redress this nation's shortcomings in the field of global communication. A well-researched, highly readable work that makes a valuable contribution to a number of historical areas.
-- T. A. Aiello Choice
-- T. A. Aiello Choice
Thanks to Winkler's careful work in military and civilian records, the book recounts in detail how a small group of American officials, spurred into action by the war emergency, tried to increase their nation's control over global information networks...Winkler's outstanding original research and clear writing make Nexus a valuable contribution to the history of information warfare, a subject that will almost certainly attract greater interest in the years to come.
-- Mark R. Wilson Business History Review
-- Mark R. Wilson Business History Review
This is a well-researched and important study assessing the role of global communication technologies and their control in wartime. It provides a cogent analysis of how the need to develop our own cable and radio links drove government policy. And it adds to the slowly growing number of studies that examine the increasingly central role of rapid and secure communication in both diplomatic and military policy in the 160 years since the development of the electric telegraph.
-- Christopher H. Sterling Journal of American History
-- Christopher H. Sterling Journal of American History
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Frontmatter
i -
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Contents
v -
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Maps and Figures
vii -
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Introduction
1 -
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ONE The Information Network and the Outbreak of War
5 -
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TWO Neutrality and Vulnerability
34 -
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THREE Security and Radios
61 -
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FOUR At War in Europe
100 -
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FIVE In Pursuit of Cables to Asia and the Americas
136 -
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SIX Radio, the Navy, and Latin America
165 -
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SEVEN The Quest for Independence
206 -
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EIGHT The Illusion of Success
239 -
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Conclusion
266 -
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Abbreviations
283 -
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Primary Sources
285 -
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Notes
289 -
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Acknowledgments
337 -
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Index
339
Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
July 1, 2009
eBook ISBN:
9780674033900
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
357
Other:
6 maps, 3 charts
eBook ISBN:
9780674033900
Audience(s) for this book
Professional and scholarly;