If this has been discussed before, I'd be glad to be directed there.
But I've been listening to an audiobook of the history of WW I (A World Torn Asunder, I think), and I can't fathom why the German Navy wasn't employed more effectively to battle the blockade that was starving Germany.
Fleet actions with battlecruisers have their limitations, naturally, but it seems like the High Seas Fleet would have at least have posed a temporary threat to the ships maintaining the blockade.
And it sounds like there were quite a few U-Boats ready by 1916 -- instead of using them to sink merchants (which drew the US in), why not use them to attack the blockade? Sink a few dreadnoughts and the British might reconsider the cost of maintaining the blockade, or even continuing the war.
Why not? What am I not seeing? I understand that it's impossible to completely break the blockade, but it need not be broken to have an impact on the course of the war, or at least gain negotiating power, or lessen the will of foreign governments to continue at great cost.
Rensslaer
But I've been listening to an audiobook of the history of WW I (A World Torn Asunder, I think), and I can't fathom why the German Navy wasn't employed more effectively to battle the blockade that was starving Germany.
Fleet actions with battlecruisers have their limitations, naturally, but it seems like the High Seas Fleet would have at least have posed a temporary threat to the ships maintaining the blockade.
And it sounds like there were quite a few U-Boats ready by 1916 -- instead of using them to sink merchants (which drew the US in), why not use them to attack the blockade? Sink a few dreadnoughts and the British might reconsider the cost of maintaining the blockade, or even continuing the war.
Why not? What am I not seeing? I understand that it's impossible to completely break the blockade, but it need not be broken to have an impact on the course of the war, or at least gain negotiating power, or lessen the will of foreign governments to continue at great cost.
Rensslaer