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Gunboat diplomacy



         


Gunboat diplomacy is the pursuit of foreign policy objectives aided by conspicuous displays of military superiority.

In the age of European empires, such displays typically involved demonstrations of naval might. A country negotiating with a European power over, for example, trading rights, would notice that a warship or fleet of ships had appeared off its coast. It was rarely necessary for such boats to illustrate the point with cannon fire.

The effectiveness of such simple demonstrations of an Imperial nation's projection of force capabilities meant that those nations with naval power, especially Britain, could establish military bases (for example, Diego Garcia) and arrange economically advantageous relationships around the world.

Those lacking an empire found that their own peacable relationships were readily dismantled in the face of such pressures, and they therefore came to depend on the Imperial nations for access to raw materials and overseas markets. For up-and-coming industrial nations in the later 19th century, such as Germany and Japan, the rules of the game were clear: establish an empire, or lose.

As the USA became the world's pre-eminent military power in the 1910s, the Rooseveltian version of gunboat diplomacy, Big Stick Diplomacy, was partially superceded by dollar diplomacy - replacing big stick with juicy carrot.

Gunboat diplomacy in the post-Cold War world still depends on naval activity. Changes to the disposition of the major fleets of the United States Navy have frequently been used by US administrations to influence opinion in foreign capitals. More urgent diplomatic points were made by the Clinton administration in the Balkans (in alliance with the Blair administration) and elsewhere, using sea-launched Tomahawk missiles.

As the NATO involvement in Serbia and Kosovo demonstrated, gunboat diplomacy occupies a grey area in international law.


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