How America Beat Queen Victoria’s Britain without Fighting

People wave as the flagship of Britain's Royal Navy HMS (Her Majesty's Ship) Ark Royal approaches Portsmouth Harbour on the coast of southern England, after operations in the Gulf conflict, May 17, 2003. REUTERS/Michael Crabtree
September 8, 2018 Topic: Security Region: Europe Tags: WarMilitaryTechnologyChinaSun Tzu

How America Beat Queen Victoria’s Britain without Fighting

America pushed Britain out of the Western Hemisphere, more or less, by the turn of the twentieth century. It did so by making itself the strongest contender in the New World, harnessing its burgeoning industrial might to build a navy able to command the waters Washington cared about most.

At the risk of inducing vertigo, turn things around once again and project today’s strategic situation in Asia back to the Atlantic in 1900. In this alt-history world the distant marine hegemon, Britain [playing the role of contemporary America], remains the undisputed master of its home waters, at liberty to dispatch fleets where it will. It enjoys fraternal ties with a Canada [Japan] that has built itself into a great seafaring power, hosts Royal Navy fleets, and is determined to preserve British maritime supremacy vis-à-vis a nearby and overbearing United States [China]. And London can court a Brazil [India] eager for help balancing against U.S. overreach in the Caribbean or South Atlantic. Faced with such an imposing coalition, America may never have met the Mahanian standard for naval power. It might have remained in its box for a time—or forever.

As might contemporary China.

James Holmes is J. C. Wylie Chair of Maritime Strategy at the U.S. Naval War College, coauthor of Red Star over the Pacific (forthcoming this November), and author of A Brief Guide to Maritime Strategy (forthcoming 2019). The views voiced here are his alone.

Image: People wave as the flagship of Britain's Royal Navy HMS (Her Majesty's Ship) Ark Royal approaches Portsmouth Harbour on the coast of southern England, after operations in the Gulf conflict, May 17, 2003. REUTERS/Michael Crabtree