Scheda di revisione: British Maritime Power and Strategy

📋 Course Outline

  1. Geographical foundations of British maritime power
  2. Maritime resources, ports and overseas EEZ
  3. Royal Navy and maritime business services
  4. Hard and soft power mix and challenges
  5. Brexit consequences and global competition

📖 1. Geographical foundations of British maritime power

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Island nation : A country made up of islands whose geography encourages sea access and maritime dependence.
  • Maritime choke points : Narrow sea passages whose control can strongly affect naval movement and commercial shipping.
  • GIUK Gap : A strategic sea corridor between Greenland, Iceland, and the UK used for critical Arctic naval traffic.
  • Territorial sea control : The ability to manage and enforce authority over surrounding waters near the UK.

📝 Essential Points

  • The UK is described as groups of islands, mainly Great Britain and Northern Ireland.
  • The UK has 12 400 km of coastline and access to the North Sea, the Channel, and the Atlantic Ocean.
  • The Dover Strait (Pas de Calais) is identified as one of two key maritime choke points.
  • The GIUK Gap is presented as critical for Arctic naval traffic.
  • The UK is said to have strong territorial control over surrounding seas.

💡 Memory Hook

Dover + GIUK = two gates: Channel gate and Arctic gate.

📖 2. Maritime resources, ports and overseas EEZ

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Exclusive economic zone : A maritime zone where a state has special rights over resources, distinct from territorial waters.
  • Blue Belt : A program creating large marine protected areas across UK-linked waters.
  • Overseas territories : British territories located outside the UK that extend maritime reach and influence.
  • Specialized ports : Ports organized around specific cargo types and traffic patterns.

📝 Essential Points

  • The source lists 14 British overseas territories in oceans worldwide.
  • The UK’s EEZ is given as 6,8 million km² and ranked as the 5th largest.
  • The overseas EEZ is described as having high biodiversity and coral reefs.
  • The Blue Belt is stated as 4 million km² of marine protected areas.
  • Ports are specialized by cargo: liquid bulk (Milford Haven), solid bulk, containers (Felixstowe), and roll-on/roll-off (Dover for France–UK traffic).
  • North Sea oil and gas are linked to energy independence for the period 1981–2004.

💡 Memory Hook

EEZ size + Blue Belt area: 6,8 million km² and 4 million km².

📖 3. Royal Navy and maritime business services

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Royal Navy power projection : The ability of the Royal Navy to operate beyond home waters to influence security and trade.
  • Trident missiles : Nuclear missile systems associated with the UK’s nuclear submarines.
  • Flags of convenience : Shipping registration practices that can reduce the direct link between a vessel and its operating country.
  • Maritime business services : Commercial and legal services that support global shipping, including insurance, law, and ship broking.

📝 Essential Points

  • Historically, the Royal Navy is described as built to protect the island and prevent any European power from dominating seas.
  • The UK is said to have supported the US in WW1 and WW2, becoming close NATO allies.
  • The modern Royal Navy is described as including HMS Queen Elizabeth and HMS Prince of Wales as new aircraft carriers.
  • The force is quantified as 13 frigates, 6 destroyers, and 4 nuclear submarines with Trident missiles.
  • Budget cuts and reduced personnel are illustrated by a drop from 100 000 in 1955 to about 30 000 today.
  • Key missions include defending territorial waters and EEZ, protecting trade routes, and fighting piracy and terrorism.

💡 Memory Hook

Numbers + missions: 13 frigates, 6 destroyers, 4 subs; defend EEZ, protect routes, fight piracy.

📖 4. Hard and soft power mix and challenges

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Hard power : Power based on military and coercive capabilities such as naval forces and control of maritime space.
  • Soft power : Power based on influence through services, norms, and reputation rather than direct force.
  • Environmental leadership : A soft-power advantage gained by leading on environmental protection and marine issues.
  • Post-Brexit political risks : Uncertainties created by the UK’s departure from the EU that can affect maritime governance and stability.

📝 Essential Points

  • The source explicitly frames UK maritime power as a mix of hard power and soft power.
  • Hard power is linked to the Royal Navy, overseas bases, and EEZ control.
  • Soft power is linked to global maritime services and environmental leadership.
  • The challenges listed include budget cuts.
  • The challenges listed include weakened global competition.
  • The challenges listed include post-Brexit political risks.

💡 Memory Hook

Hard = Navy + bases + EEZ; Soft = services + environment.

📖 5. Brexit consequences and global competition

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Common Fisheries Policy : An EU fisheries framework referenced as having declined in the source’s account.
  • Territorial disputes : Conflicts over sovereignty or control of maritime territories and islands.
  • GIUK gap control : The ability to maintain influence over the GIUK corridor used for Arctic naval traffic.
  • Royal Navy global limits : Constraints on the Royal Navy’s ability to respond globally due to distance, resources, and strategic competition.

📝 Essential Points

  • Fishing disputes are described as involving UK regained control while EU’s Common Fisheries Policy declined.
  • The source states that EU steel fishes in UK waters under quotas.
  • Ireland, Spain, and Cyprus are described as ousted from EU to hold direct talks with the UK due to shared borders.
  • The source lists risks of possible UK disintegration: Scotland seeking a new referendum and Northern Ireland seeking reunification with Ireland.
  • Brexit-related risks include loss of EEZ area and weakened GIUK gap control.
  • Territorial disputes named include the Falklands (Argentina claim) and the Chagos islands (Mauritius claim).

💡 Memory Hook

Brexit risks: EEZ loss + GIUK weakening; competition shows up in Falklands/Chagos and constrained naval reach.

📊 Synthesis Tables

Hard vs soft power in UK maritime power

DimensionExamplesRole
Hard powerRoyal Navy, overseas bases, EEZ controlProjects coercive maritime influence
Soft powerGlobal maritime services, environmental leadershipBuilds influence through reputation and services

⚠️ Common Pitfalls & Confusions

  1. Confusing the GIUK Gap with the Dover Strait: the first is tied to Arctic naval traffic, the second to the Channel/Pas de Calais corridor.
  2. Mixing up EEZ size with territorial sea: the source gives a specific EEZ figure (6,8 million km²) and treats it as a separate maritime space.
  3. Assuming the UK has top container companies based in the UK: the source says there are none.
  4. Thinking Brexit only affects fishing: the source also links it to EEZ area, GIUK gap control, and Trident base uncertainty.
  5. Believing the Royal Navy can always prevent seizures: the source cites the 2019 tanker seizure as evidence of limits.

✅ Exam Checklist

  1. Identify the two maritime choke points and state what each is used for in the source.
  2. State the UK coastline length and list the three sea areas the UK has access to.
  3. Give the EEZ area figure and the ranking (5th largest) as stated.
  4. Explain what the Blue Belt is and provide its stated area.
  5. Match each port example to its cargo type (Milford Haven, Felixstowe, Dover).
  6. List the modern Royal Navy carrier names and the quantified surface/submarine composition given.
  7. Recall the personnel decline figures (100 000 in 1955 to about 30 000 today) and the missions listed.
  8. Describe the decline of the Merchant Navy using the container-company and flags-of-convenience claims.
  9. Name the three London maritime business services and their stated shares/figures (insurance, law, ship broking) and the IMO hosting point.
  10. State the hard vs soft power elements of UK maritime power as framed in the source.
  11. Summarize the Brexit fishing dispute logic (UK control vs EU quotas) and the named countries involved in direct talks.
  12. List the named territorial disputes (Falklands, Chagos) with the claimant countries given.
  13. Explain the example showing Royal Navy global limits (2019 tanker seizure) and the South China Sea presence challenge described.

Metti alla prova le tue conoscenze

Metti alla prova le tue conoscenze su British Maritime Power and Strategy con 4 domande a scelta multipla con correzioni dettagliate.

1. Which feature best explains why the United Kingdom has long developed strong maritime power?

2. Which geographical features are considered critical to the UK's maritime power and influence?

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Ripassa con le flashcard

Memorizza i concetti chiave di British Maritime Power and Strategy con 9 flashcard interattive.

Island nation — role?

Supports maritime access and power projection.

Geographical basis of UK power

Island geography and strategic sea passages.

Maritime choke points — function?

Control naval and commercial movement.

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