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HAMMOND, RICHARD (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   127119


British policy on total maritime warfare and the anti-shipping / Hammond, Richard   Journal Article
Hammond, Richard Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract 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.
Key Words Warfare  Maritime Warfare  Mediterranean  British Policy  British  Anti-Shipping 
World War II 
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2
ID:   145260


Fighting under a different flag: multinational naval cooperation and submarine warfare in the mediterranean, 1940–1944 / Hammond, Richard   Article
Hammond, Richard Article
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Summary/Abstract The exiled navies of many Allied nations came under British operational control in World War II. Six of these contributed significant proportions of their submarine fleets to the Mediterranean, where there was great need for them, yet troubled relations meant multinational naval cooperation (MNC) was often extremely difficult. British attempts to establish structures to improve this were frequently hampered, while perceived differing strategic “worth” led the British to treat their new allies in an unequal manner. Ultimately, while MNC was broadly successful in the British home theatre, it was much less effective in the Mediterranean and valuable resources subsequently went underused.
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