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ID127119
Title ProperBritish policy on total maritime warfare and the anti-shipping campaign in the Mediterranean, 1940-1944
LanguageENG
AuthorHammond, Richard
Publication2013.
Summary / Abstract (Note)During World War II, the British ran a sustained anti-shipping campaign against Axis merchant and supply traffic in the Mediterranean. Although the effects of this on the land war in North Africa have been the subject of much debate, little attention has been paid to the nature and prosecution of the campaign itself. This article analyses the changes in British attitudes and policy towards attacking merchant shipping prior to and throughout the campaign. It then goes on to examine the conduct of the campaign itself and compare it with other British efforts elsewhere during the war. It concludes that the anti-shipping campaign in the Mediterranean was a unique combined arms offensive for the British, and a major evolution in their attitudes and policy towards maritime total war.
`In' analytical NoteJournal of Strategic Studies Vol.36, No.6; December 2013: p.789-814
Journal SourceJournal of Strategic Studies Vol.36, No.6; December 2013: p.789-814
Key WordsBritish ;  Anti-Shipping ;  Mediterranean ;  World War II ;  Maritime Warfare ;  Warfare ;  British Policy


 
 
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