Mote Marine — [updated]
Third, Against a superior blue-water navy, the Mote Marine’s strategy is asymmetrical. They do not seek a classic fleet action. Instead, they use torpedoes (in the modern era), fireships, boarding parties, and constant harassment. This was the doctrine of the American “Jeffersonian Gunboat Navy” (1805-1812), a fleet of over 150 small, coastal vessels intended not to fight the Royal Navy on the open ocean but to defend American harbors, rivers, and coasts by making any amphibious invasion too costly to contemplate.
First, In the age of sail, a deep-draft ship-of-the-line could not effectively engage a well-defended harbor because it could not get close enough without grounding. The Mote Marine’s shallow-draft vessels, however, could position themselves in the shoals, anchored or under oars, turning themselves into mobile artillery platforms. The classic example is the Battle of Valcour Island (1776) on Lake Champlain. Benedict Arnold’s small, makeshift American flotilla—quintessential Mote Marines—deliberately fought a British fleet in a narrow channel where British seamanship and superior firepower were negated by the constricted, shallow waters. The Americans lost the battle but won the strategic delay. mote marine
Second, The Mote Marine is the master of the amphibious raid—the “descent upon the coast.” Operating from their motes, they strike at enemy shipping, coastal supply depots, and isolated outposts, then vanish back into the maze of creeks and islands. The Dunkirkers of the Eighty Years’ War (1568-1648) are the archetype. Operating from the Spanish-held coast, their shallow-draft frigates and wellboats preyed on Dutch and English merchant shipping in the shallow waters of the North Sea and the Channel, choking the nascent Dutch Republic’s trade. Third, Against a superior blue-water navy, the Mote