Hunger  
Food Deprivation as a Military Weapon
Author(s): N S Nash
Published by Pen and Sword
Publication Date:  Available in all formats
ISBN: 9781399040617
Pages: 0

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Throughout the ages, more combatants and civilians have died in war of the effects of starvation and resulting disease than have been killed by bullet or bomb.

The author of this fascinating work argues that, over the last 160 years, conflicts have been decided not just on the battlefield but by the denial of an adversary’s access to food. The starvation that followed led to military indiscipline, social unrest, and a failure of governance. Numerous examples prove his point, not least Germany in 1919.

The Union blockade of the Confederacy in 1861 was a major factor in the outcome of the Civil War as was the American strategy against Japan in 1943-1945. The fates of besieged forces both at Vicksburg in 1863 and the British at Kut in 1916 were sealed when control of their respective supply routes was lost. Churchill’s fears over Hitler’s U-boat campaign were well justified.

‘Logistics’ is a modern word, but it describes a fundamental element of generalship, amply demonstrated at Metz in 1870 when logistic illiteracy resulted in a vast and hitherto undefeated French army having no option but to surrender.

This thought-provoking book vividly demonstrates that extreme hunger is the precursor to starvation and, consequently, almost inevitable defeat. It proves that deprivation of food is a potent weapon that no commander can ignore.
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Throughout the ages, more combatants and civilians have died in war of the effects of starvation and resulting disease than have been killed by bullet or bomb.

The author of this fascinating work argues that, over the last 160 years, conflicts have been decided not just on the battlefield but by the denial of an adversary’s access to food. The starvation that followed led to military indiscipline, social unrest, and a failure of governance. Numerous examples prove his point, not least Germany in 1919.

The Union blockade of the Confederacy in 1861 was a major factor in the outcome of the Civil War as was the American strategy against Japan in 1943-1945. The fates of besieged forces both at Vicksburg in 1863 and the British at Kut in 1916 were sealed when control of their respective supply routes was lost. Churchill’s fears over Hitler’s U-boat campaign were well justified.

‘Logistics’ is a modern word, but it describes a fundamental element of generalship, amply demonstrated at Metz in 1870 when logistic illiteracy resulted in a vast and hitherto undefeated French army having no option but to surrender.

This thought-provoking book vividly demonstrates that extreme hunger is the precursor to starvation and, consequently, almost inevitable defeat. It proves that deprivation of food is a potent weapon that no commander can ignore.
Table of contents
  • Cover
  • Series
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • Contents
  • List of Illustrations
  • List of Maps
  • Abbreviations used in notes
  • Acknowledgements
  • Foreword
  • 1. On Food Denial
  • Part 1: The American Civil War
    • 2. US Civil War: Secession, Casus Belli (1861)
    • 3. Blockade of the South (1861–5)
    • 4. Transport
    • 5. Cotton, Sugar and Salt
    • 6. Vicksburg, Gettysburg and Port Hudson (1863)
    • 7. Civil Disorder in the South (1863)
    • 8. The Confederacy Starves and the Union Triumphs (1864–5)
  • Part 2: The Franco-Prussian War
    • 9. The Franco-Prussian War (1870–1)
    • 10. The Siege of Metz (1870)
    • 11. The Siege of Paris (1870–1)
  • Part 3: The First World War
    • 12. The British Blockade of Germany, and the 1917 French Army Mutiny (1914–19)
    • 13. Mesopotamia: the Fall of Kut (1915–16)
  • Part 4: The Second World War
    • 14. Germany and the Hunger Plan (1939–45)
    • 15. The Battle of the Atlantic: Setting the Scene (1939–40)
    • 16. Battle is Joined (1939–41)
    • 17. Japanese Expansion (1931–45)
    • 18. The War in the Pacific: Guadalcanal to Okinawa (1942–5)
    • 19. The Philippines and Burma (1941–5)
  • Part 5: Famine
    • 20. Ukraine, Bengal, Vietnam, and China (1931–46)
    • 21. Cannibalism
  • Part 6: Counter-Revolutionary War
    • 22. The Franco-Vietnam War (1946–54)
    • 23. The Malayan Emergency (1948–60)
    • 24. The USA-Vietnam War (1955–73)
  • Part 7: The Cold War
    • 25. Berlin and its Governance (1945–8)
    • 26. The Blockade of Berlin (June 1948–May 1949)
  • Conclusions
  • Annexure: Research on the Effects of Extreme Hunger and Starvation, by Dr H.L. Meiselman
  • Bibliography
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