A naval force has 'command of the sea' when it is so strong that its rivals cannot attack it directly. With command of the sea, a country (or alliance) can ensure that its own military and merchant ships can move around at will, while its rivals are forced either to stay in port or to try to evade it. Most famously, the British
Royal Navy held command of the sea for long periods from the 18th to the early 20th century, allowing Britain and its allies to trade and to move troops and supplies easily in wartime while its enemies could not (hence the famous British patriotic song, ''
Rule Britannia'', which contains the refrain, "Rule Britannia! Britannia rule the waves"). For example, Britain was able to blockade France during the
Napoleonic Wars, the
United States during the
War of 1812, and
Germany during
World War I.
Countermeasures
During the
age of sail, there were two primary countermeasures to another power holding control of the sea:
smuggling, and
privateering. Smuggling helped to ensure that a country could continue trading (and obtaining food and other vital supplies) even when under blockade, while privateering allowed the weaker power to disrupt the stronger power's trade. A more modern countermeasure, similar to privateering, was the use of
submarine warfare by
Germany during
World War I and
World War II to attack allied merchant shipping primarily in the
Atlantic Ocean,
Mediterranean Sea, and
Baltic Sea.
During
World War II,
aircraft also became an effective countermeasure to command of the sea, since ships could not defend themselves well against air attack. The
Battle of Britain was largely an attempt by Germany to eliminate the
Royal Air Force, so that it would not be able to defend the Royal Navy from air attack.
Open seas
Historically, many powers attempted to extend command of the sea into peacetime, imposing taxes or other restrictions on shipping using areas of open sea. For example, Venice claimed the
Adriatic, and exacted a heavy toll from vessels navigating its northern waters.
Genoa and France each claimed portions of the western Mediterranean.
Denmark and
Sweden claimed to share the
Baltic between them.
Spain claimed dominion over the
Pacific and the
Gulf of Mexico, and
Portugal over the
Indian Ocean and all the
Atlantic south of
Morocco (Hall, 148-9).
Gradually, however, countries agreed that the open seas should be free to all shipping in peacetime and to neutral shipping in wartime.
Great Britain accepted the principle in 1805;
Russia, in 1824; and the
United States (tacitly) in 1894. Many treaties, including the
Treaty of Versailles, have dealt with the open seas, and currently the
United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea formalizes this freedom.
References cited
★
WE Hall, ''Treatise on International Law'', 4th ed., 1895.