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The return of the energy weapon: An old tool creating new dangers

By: Borfoff, Jason and O’Sullivan, Meghan L. .
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: Foreign Affairs Description: 104(6), Nov-Dec, 2025: p.56-71. In: Foreign AffairsSummary: Throughout much of the modern era, limiting or disrupting the flow of energy was a highly effective tool of global power. In 1923, Admiral Reginald Bacon of the Royal Navy declared that the United Kingdom’s oil blockade of Germany in World War I was the powerful economic weapon to which “the ultimate collapse of that nation and her armies was mainly due.” A generation later, Soviet leader Joseph Stalin attributed the Allied victory over Nazi Germany to the Red Army’s success in denying Hitler access to oilfields in the Caucasus.-Reproduced https://www.foreignaffairs.com/united-states/return-energy-weapon-bordoff-osullivan
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Articles Articles Indian Institute of Public Administration
104(6), Nov-Dec, 2025: p.56-71 Available AR138022

Throughout much of the modern era, limiting or disrupting the flow of energy was a highly effective tool of global power. In 1923, Admiral Reginald Bacon of the Royal Navy declared that the United Kingdom’s oil blockade of Germany in World War I was the powerful economic weapon to which “the ultimate collapse of that nation and her armies was mainly due.” A generation later, Soviet leader Joseph Stalin attributed the Allied victory over Nazi Germany to the Red Army’s success in denying Hitler access to oilfields in the Caucasus.-Reproduced



https://www.foreignaffairs.com/united-states/return-energy-weapon-bordoff-osullivan

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