Stephen C. Neff
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A great war and new departures
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This chapter focuses on the ways in which the basic war strategies of the two sides affected neutrals, and in the legal innovations and controversies involved. From the Allied side, came the set of techniques sometimes given the broad collective title of 'long-distance blockade'. From the Central powers' side, the outstanding innovation was a new style of preying on enemy commerce at sea: submarine warfare, which was waged by means that departed significantly from those of traditional maritime war. An important resemblance between the Great War and the Napoleonic wars of the previous century was the prominent part played by sovereign right measures, as contrasted with traditional belligerents' rights per se. At the very outset of the War, Germany provided a spectacular demonstration of its readiness to commit serious infringements of the normal rights of neutrals under the rubric of necessity.

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