Tirpitz Plan
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Tirpitz Plan, formulated by Admiral Alfred von Tirpitz, was Germany's strategic aim to build the second largest navy in the world after the United Kingdom, thereby advancing itself as a world power. The British saw it not only as a challenge to its naval supremacy, but as a threat to its national survival (since the island of Britain was far from self-sufficient in food, and dependent on colonial resources); they responded in kind, sparking off an arms race. Germany responded to the plan with the Fleet Acts, which led to greater naval development.
[edit] See also
- German battleship Tirpitz
- Dreadnought (book)
- Castles of Steel: Britain, Germany, and the Winning of the Great War at Sea
- Fleet in Being