Dictionary Definition
blockade
Noun
1 a war measure that isolates some area of
importance to the enemy [syn: encirclement]
2 prevents access or progress
Verb
1 hinder or prevent the progress or
accomplishment of; "His brother blocked him at every turn" [syn:
obstruct, block, hinder, stymie, stymy, embarrass]
2 render unsuitable for passage; "block the way";
"barricade the streets"; "stop the busy road" [syn: barricade, block, stop, block off,
block
up, bar]
3 obstruct access to [syn: block
off]
4 impose a blockade on [syn: seal off]
User Contributed Dictionary
Noun
Translations
the isolation of something
Verb
- To create a blockade against.
Translations
- Japanese: 封鎖する(ふうさする, fuusa suru)
Extensive Definition
A blockade is any effort to prevent supplies,
troops, information or aid
from reaching an opposing force. Blockades are the cornerstone to
nearly all military
campaigns and the tool of choice for economic warfare on an
opposing nation. The
International Criminal Court plans to include blockades against
coasts and ports in its list of acts of war in
2009.
Blockades can take any number of forms from a
simple garrison of
troops along a main roadway to utilizing dozens or hundreds of
surface combatant ships in securing a harbor, denying its use to the
enemy, and even in cutting off or jamming broadcast signals from
radio or television. As a military operation, blockades have been
known to be the deciding factor in winning or losing a war.
Blockades are planned around four general
rules:
- Value of thing to become blockaded
- Blockading strength is equal to or greater than the opposing force
- Suitability of terrain to aid in the blockade
- Willpower to maintain the blockade
First, the value of the item being blockaded must
warrant the need to blockade. For example, during the 1962 Cuban
Missile Crisis, the items to be blockaded (or "quarantined", the more
legally- and politically-neutral term selected by President
John
F. Kennedy) were medium-range missiles, capable of delivering
nuclear
weaponry, bound for Cuba. The need for the
blockade was high because of the value of the missiles as a
military threat against the United
States.
Second, the strength of the blockading force must
be equal to or greater in strength than the opposition. The
blockade is only successful if the 'thing' is prevented from
reaching its receiver. Again the Cuban blockade illustration shows
that the United States put to sea a number of warships to inspect
and blockade the waters around Cuba. This show of strength showed
the U.S.
Navy forces were much larger and stronger in the area compared
to their Soviet Navy
counterparts.
Third, in the case of land blockades, choosing
suitable terrain. Knowing where the force will be travelling
through will help the blockader in choosing territory to aid them:
for example, forcing a garrison between a high mountain pass in
order to bottleneck the opposing force.
Fourth, willpower to maintain a blockade. The
success of a blockade is based almost entirely on the will of the
people to maintain it. The Cuban blockade is an example of
maintaining willpower to block the missiles from reaching Cuba
despite the risk of starting a world wide nuclear
war.
Types
- Naval blockade, an effort at sea, to prevent supplies from reaching the enemy, e.g. mining of Haiphong harbor.
- Siege
- Electronic Warfare Jamming
Historical blockades
Historical blockades include:- The Spartan blockade of Athens following the Battle of Aegospotami, depriving Athens of the ability to import grain or communicate with its empire.
- The Dutch Republic's blockade of the Scheldt between 1585 and 1792, denying Spanish-ruled Antwerp's access to international trade and shifting much of its trade to Amsterdam.
- British blockade of France and its allies during the French Revolutionary War and Napoleonic War
- British blockade of the United States east coast during the War of 1812
- Union Blockade - the Union blockading the coasts of the Confederacy during the American Civil War
- Battle of Iquique during the War of the Pacific
- British blockade of Germany during World War I as a part of the First Battle of the Atlantic resulted in the death of about 750,000 http://www.dhm.de/lemo/html/wk1/wirtschaft/versorgung/index.html civilians during the War. Many more had to die from starvation after the Armistice in November 1918 as the blockade was continued in the Aftermath of World War I and into 1919, in order to force Germany to sign the Treaty of Versailles in June 1919
- The Second Battle of the Atlantic during World War II
- United States blockade of Japan during World War II
- The German blockade of the Scheldt between September 1944 and November 1944, denying to allied shipping use of the port of Antwerp. (See Battle of the Scheldt.)
- Soviet land blockade of West Berlin, 1948–1949, known as the Berlin Blockade.
- Egyptian blockades of the Straits of Tiran prior to the 1956 Suez War and the 1967 Arab-Israeli War.
- United States blockade of Cuba during the Cuban missile crisis in 1962
- India blockade of East Pakistan during the 1971 Bangladesh War
- NATO blockade of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 1993–1996 during Operation Sharp Guard
- Israeli sea and land blockade of the Gaza Strip since the outbreak of the Second Intifada (2000) and up to the present.
- Israeli blockades of some or all the shores of Lebanon at various times during the Lebanese Civil War (1975–1990), the 1982 Lebanon War, and the 1982-2000 South Lebanon conflict - resumed during the 2006 Israel-Lebanon conflict.
See also
blockade in Bulgarian: Блокада
blockade in Czech: Blokáda
blockade in German: Blockade (Militär)
blockade in Estonian: Blokaad
blockade in Spanish: Bloqueo (estrategia)
blockade in French: Blocus
blockade in Indonesian: Blokade
blockade in Japanese: 封鎖
blockade in Norwegian: Blokade
blockade in Simple English: Blockade
blockade in Slovenian: Blokada
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Jacksonian epilepsy, Rolandic epilepsy, abdominal
epilepsy, access,
acquired epilepsy, activated epilepsy, affect epilepsy, afterthought, akinetic
epilepsy, apoplexy,
arm, armor, armor-plate, arrest, arrestation, arrestment, attack, autonomic epilepsy,
ban, bank, bar, bar out, barricade, barrier, barring, battle, beleaguer, beleaguerment, beset, besetment, besiege, besiegement, bind, blank wall, blind alley,
blind gut, block, block
up, blockade, blockading, blockage, blocking, bolt, bottleneck, bound, box in, boycott, bulwark, bung, bureaucratic delay, cage, cardiac epilepsy, castellate, catch, caulk, cecum, censorship, chamber, check, chink, chock, choke, choke off, choke up,
choking, choking off,
circumscription,
clog, clog up, clogging, clonic spasm,
clonus, close, close in, close off, close
tight, close up, closing, closing up, closure, compass, confinement, congest, congestion, constipate, constipation, constrict, constriction, contain, convulsion, coop, coop in, coop up, cordon, cordon off, cordoning, cork, corral, cortical epilepsy,
costiveness, count
out, cover, cramp, crenellate, crowd, cul-de-sac, cursive
epilepsy, curtain, cut
off, dam, dam up, dead end,
debar, debarment, debarring, delay, delayage, delayed reaction,
demarcation,
detainment, detention, determent, deterrent, difficulty, dig in, diurnal
epilepsy, dog, double take,
dragging, drawback, eclampsia, embargo, embattle, embolism, embolus, encircle, encirclement, enclose, enclosure, encompass, encompassment, enshrine, entrench, envelop, envelopment, epilepsia, epilepsia gravior,
epilepsia major, epilepsia minor, epilepsia mitior, epilepsia
nutans, epilepsia tarda, epilepsy, exception, exclude, exclusion, falling sickness,
fence, fence in, fill, fill up, fit, fixation, focal epilepsy,
foot-dragging, fortify,
foul, freeze out, frenzy, garrison, gorge, grand mal, halt, hampering, hang-up, harass, harry, haute mal, hazard, hedge in, hem in,
hindering, hindrance, hitch, holdback, holdup, house in, hurdle, hysterical epilepsy,
ictus, ignore, immurement, impasse, impediment, impound, imprison, imprisonment, inadmissibility,
incarcerate,
incarceration,
include, inclusion, infarct, infarction, inhibition, injunction, interference, interim, interruption, invest, investment, jail, jam, joker, keep out, kennel, lag, lagging, larval epilepsy,
laryngeal epilepsy, laryngospasm, latent
epilepsy, lay siege to, leaguer, leave out, let, lock, lock out, lockjaw, lockout, logjam, man, man the garrison, matutinal
epilepsy, menstrual epilepsy, mew, mew up, mine, moratorium, musicogenic
epilepsy, myoclonous epilepsy, narrowing, negativism, nocturnal
epilepsy, nonadmission, nuisance
value, objection,
obstacle, obstipate, obstipation, obstruct, obstruction, obstructionism, obstructive, occlude, occlusion, omission, omit, one small difficulty,
opposition, ostracize, pack, palisade, paperasserie, paroxysm, pass over, pause, pen, pen in, petit mal, physiologic
epilepsy, pincer movement, plug, plug up, pocket, preclude, preclusion, prohibit, prohibition, psychic
epilepsy, psychological block, psychomotor epilepsy, quarantine, rail in, red
tape, red-tapeism, red-tapery, reflex epilepsy, reject, rejection, relegate, relegation, repression, reprieve, repudiate, repudiation, resistance, respite, restraint, restriction, retardance, retardation, retardment, roadblock, rotatoria, rub, sealing off, seizure, send to Coventry,
sensory epilepsy, serial epilepsy, setback, shrine, shut in, shut off, shut
out, shut tight, shut up, shutdown, shutting, shutting up, siege, slow-up, slowdown, slowness, snag, soften up, spasm, spile, squeeze, squeeze shut, stable, stanch, stay, stay of execution, stench, stifle, stop, stop up, stoppage, stopper, stopple, strangle, stranglehold, strangulate, strangulation, stricture, stroke, stuff, stuff up, stumbling block,
stumbling stone, suffocate, suppression, surround, suspension, taboo, tardy epilepsy, tetanus, tetany, throes, thromboembolism,
thrombosis, tie-up,
time lag, tonic epilepsy, tonic spasm, torsion spasm, traumatic
epilepsy, trismus,
ucinate epilepsy, vertical envelopment, visitation, wait, wall, wall in, wrap, yard, yard up