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MARITIME POWERS (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   130602


Bridging capability gaps: Pakistan Navy's quest For used US naval ships / Mathew, Varghese   Journal Article
Mathew, Varghese Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract Whoever controls the Indian Ocean, dominates Asia. This Ocean is the key to seven seas. In the 215'' century, the fate of the world would be decided on its waters". Admiral Alfred Thayer Mahan Indian Ocean is the third largest of the world's oceanic divisions. ; The world's earliest civilisations in Mesopotamia, ancient Egypt, the ' Indian subcontinent, Persia and later in Southeast Asia, all developed around the Indian Ocean. Today its littorals and hinterland comprises more than fifty nation states and two-thirds of the world's known reserves of strategic raw materials while an estimated 40 °/o of the world's offshore oil production comes from it.2 The Oceans have been historically the arenas for contest between maritime powers.
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2
ID:   124284


Law of the sea: a conceptual inquiry / Singh, Jai S   Journal Article
Singh, Jai S Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract History of the law of the sea is to a large extent the story of the development of freedom of the seas doctorine and the vicissitudes through wgich has it has passed through the centuries. For the last nearly 200 years, it has been accepted as an undisputed priciples, almost a dogma, which no one could dare challanges.
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