Embargo
EMBARGO
An embargo is a formal policy by a government to prevent the movement of exports either out of its own ports or into another country. It differs from a boycott in that it only involves the interruption of exports, not other financial or commercial transactions. A civil embargo is directed against one's own shippers to prevent them from shipping vital materials to warring nations. A hostile embargo is directed against the economic well-being of a foreign power.
Because of the central role of the U.S. economy in global trade, the United States frequently uses embargoes as effective, nonviolent tools of foreign policy. Although the United States declared its neutrality when Great Britain and France went to war in the early 1800s, both of the warring countries blocked U.S. merchant ships. And in 1807 a British warship killed three U.S. citizens while forcing four British-born "deserters" to rejoin the British Navy. In response, President Thomas Jefferson (1801–1809) convinced Congress to pass the Embargo Act of 1807, which banned all U.S. ships from trading in foreign ports. French and British ships continued to attack U.S. ships, however, and the damaging affects on the U.S. economy forced Jefferson to repeal the embargo in 1809. When Great Britain continued violating U.S. neutrality and commandeering U.S. sailors, Congress passed the Embargo Act of 1812 to block all trade between the United States and Great Britain.
During the American Civil War (1861–1865) the Confederacy considered placing an embargo on cotton shipments to Great Britain, to force Great Britain to enter the war as an ally. The Confederate Congress never passed the embargo, but Confederate state governments and individual citizens imposed a voluntary embargo on cotton exports to England. The British remained neutral throughout the war, and the Southern economy suffered greatly from the North's embargo on exports to the South.
In 1941 the United States imposed an embargo on German, Italian, French, and Danish ships in U.S. ports before it was finally forced to enter World War II (1939–1945) after Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor. As a member of the United Nations, the United States used embargoes against North Korea and China during the Korean War (1950–1953), against Iraq after the Gulf War (1991), and against the former Yugoslavia in the 1990s. In June 1960 President Dwight D. Eisenhower (1953–1961) imposed the longest-running embargo in U.S. history by blocking all exports (except food and medicine) to Cuba because of Fidel Castro's (1926–) hostile actions against U.S. interests.
See also: Embargo Act, OPEC Oil Embargo
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
T'Zerah(TM) Selected as Exclusive Skin Care Line at the Backstage Creations Retreat during the 2007 Golden Globe(R) Awards.
PR Newswire; 1/10/2007; 700+ words
; ...given the opportunity to experience t'Zerah(TM), the luxurious award-winning...rehearsals the two days prior to the show! t'Zerah has been selected to be the exclusive skin...and will go home with a complete t'Zerah skin regimen, including Or' l'Or de...
|
|
Celebrities Leave Golden Globe Rehearsals Looking & Feeling More Beautiful Thanks to t'Zerah - A Couture Line of Natural Skin Care Treatments.
PR Newswire; 1/16/2007; 692 words
; ...relaxed after receiving a complete t'Zerah skin regimen, including Or' l'Or de...home with an exclusive collection of t'Zerah products presented in a custom made ivory...hook me up with two of those boxes?" T'Zerah, a luxurious couture-quality line of...
|
|
Zerah Wahrhaftig's Journey
Magazine article from: Judaism; 7/1/2003; ; 700+ words
; ZERAH WAHRHAFTIG, AMONG THE SIGNERS OF THE Iisraeli Declaration of Independence...when Poland was conquered by the Germans and Warsaw was heavily bombed, Zerah and his wife, Naomi, who was then in the last months of her pregnancy...
|
|
DigiTrust Group.(TECHNOLOGY)(appointment of Michael Zerah )(Brief article)
Magazine article from: Los Angeles Business Journal; 3/23/2009; ; 519 words
; Michael Zerah has been named business development manager of the DigiTrust Group, a Century City information security consulting firm. Zerah was previously business development manager for the Cherokee Group, a Van Nuys brand management and licensing company.
|
|
Zerah Warhaftig, signer of Declaration of Independence and NRP leader, dies at 96
Newspaper article from: Jerusalem Post; 9/27/2002; ; 489 words
; 00-00-0000 Headline: Zerah Warhaftig, signer of Declaration of Independence and NRP leader...Page: 01 Friday, September 27, 2002 -- Former cabinet minister Zerah Warhaftig, an Israel Prize winner, leader in Hapoel Hamizrahi and...
|
|
Zerah Warhaftig
Newspaper article from: The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel; 9/28/2002; 288 words
; Zerah Warhaftig, 96 Signer of Israeli declaration Saturday, September 28, 2002 Jerusalem -- Zerah Warhaftig, a signer of Israel's declaration of independence and a rescuer of Jewish refugees during World War II, died Thursday. He was 96...
|
|
Forbidden Fruit named a winner.(Best New Product, t'Zerah Skincare)(Brief article)
Magazine article from: Global Cosmetic Industry; 4/1/2006; 502 words
; EX-TRACTS, the beauty and wellness show, named t'Zerah Skincare as the winner of Best New Product. The t'Zerah Forbidden Fruit Collection won based on the line's creative innovation, visual appearance, technological makeup and overall...
|
|
T'Zerah uses 100% organic oil from the seeds of the pomegranate to create its new Forbidden Fruit collection.(Marketing News)
Magazine article from: Household & Personal Products Industry; 3/1/2006; 700+ words
; * T'Zerah uses 100% organic oil from the seeds of the pomegranate to create its new Forbidden Fruit collection. The oil, named POMega5...
|
|
Rabbi Zerah Warhaftig: Founder of Israel a 'giant' in serving nation and the Jewish people
Newspaper article from: The Jewish Week; 10/4/2002; ; 676 words
; Lipman, Steve The Jewish Week 10-04-2002 Rabbi Zerah Warhaftig, one of the two surviving signers of Israel's 1948 Declaration of Independence and an Israel Prize winner, died Sept...
|
|
On Guard
Newspaper article from: Jerusalem Post; 8/18/1995; ; 700+ words
; ...armed robbery, walks into warden Rahel Zerah's office without knocking. They are...there are locked cells for about 30 women. Zerah is in charge of Savyon. "She's the...tells a visitor, throwing her arm around Zerah's shoulder. They hold hands. "Better...
|
|
Zerah
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Zerah , in the Bible. 1 Younger of the twin sons of Judah and his daughter-in-law Tamar. The following patronymics are apparently...
|
|
Ethan
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Ethan , in the Bible. 1 Ezrahite; title of Psalm 89. He is probably the same as Ethan, son of Zerah. 2, 3 Two temple singers.
|
|
Hamilton, William Rowan
Dictionary entry from: Complete Dictionary of Scientific Biography
...was the more dramatic skill of rapid calculation that first attracted attention. In 1818 he competed unsuccessfully against Zerah Colburn, the American “ calculating boy ” ; he met him again in 1820. At about this time he also began...
|
|
Zara
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Zara or Zarah , same as Zerah 1.
|
|
Tamar
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Tamar , in the Bible. 1 Mother of Judah's twin sons Pharez and Zerah. An alternate spelling is Thamar. 2 Daughter of David and Maachah. She was the victim of her half brother Amnon's passion. 3 Daughter of Absalom.
|