ID | 133391 |
Title Proper | Maritime commerce warfare |
Other Title Information | the coercive response of the weak? |
Language | ENG |
Author | Peifer, Douglas C |
Publication | 2013. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | Maritime commerce warfare" has a distinctly dated whiff. The great Anglo- American naval theorists of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries-the Colomb brothers, Alfred Thayer Mahan, and Julian Corbett-all dismissed it as an indecisive strategy of the weak. Imperial Germany's turn to unrestricted submarine warfare in 1917 failed to achieve its political purpose, instead bringing the United States into the war just as war weariness and revolution threatened to undermine the Entente's military effectiveness. In the Second World War, both Germany and the United States used the submarine with deadly effectiveness against the maritime supply lines of their enemies, but even the more effective of their campaigns-that of the U |
`In' analytical Note | Naval War College Review Vol.66, No.2; Spr.2013: p.83-109 |
Journal Source | Naval War College Review Vol.66, No.2; Spr.2013: p.83-109 |
Key Words | Maritime Conflicts ; Maritime Commerce Warfare - MCW ; Submarine Warfare ; United States - US ; US Navy - USN ; Inductive Strategy ; World War - II ; Warfare History ; Naval Warfare ; Military Effectiveness ; Germany ; Maritime Warfare |