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Original Articles

Stranglehold: The Context, Conduct and Consequences of an American Naval Blockade of China

Pages 385-421
Received 13 Jul 2012
Accepted 23 Oct 2012
Published online: 12 Feb 2013
 
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The mounting challenge posed by China's military modernization has highlighted the need for the United States to analyze its ability to execute a naval blockade. A blockade strategy is viable, but it would be limited to a narrow context: the United States would have to be engaged in a protracted conflict over vital interests, and it would need the support of key regional powers. The United States would also need to implement a mix between a close and distant blockade in order to avoid imperiling the conflict's strategic context. If enacted, a blockade could exact a ruinous cost on the Chinese economy and state.

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Acknowledgments

The author wishes to express his deepest thanks to Samuel Berkowitz, Benjamin Gage, Peter Garretson, Steven Glinert, Keigh Hammond, Kathleen Higgs, Craig Koerner, David Livingston, Oriana Mastro, Parvathy Murukurthy, Elliot Musilek, Scott Savitz, Lowell Schwartz, Christopher Scott, Andrew O'Shaughnessy, Paul Staniland, Ashley Tellis, Jim Thomas, Reece Trevor, Amanda Wall, Timothy Walton, Becky White, Martin Wolberg-Stok and all the anonymous reviewers for their invaluable comments and suggestions.

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