3 INTRODUCTORY CHAPTER,
There is no agreement amongst jurists on the subject
of retaliation, except on the principle that it is an
exceptional measure and one to be used oniy as a last
resort. The means adopted by Great Britain and France
for retaliation against the Central Powers were based on
the principles of blockade, but with considerable
extensions of the rules formerly adopted. It did not
lie within the province which Dr. Colombos has defined
to discuss the future of the Law of Blockade in detail,
or to examine the contention advanced by the British
Foreign Office in their correspondence with the United
States that the measures taken under the Orders in
Council were a legitimate development of the Law of
Blockade under the modern conditions of naval warfare.
He points out, however, that close blockades of the old
type had become impracticable, and long-range blockades
must now be accepted.
One of the most important of the subjects of the
decisions in the Prize Courts was that of Contraband.®
No subject, as Dr. Colombos points out, has aroused so
much discussion and controversy, and experience proved
the futility of the attempt made by the Declaration of
London to classify various articles under the headings
of absolute and conditional contraband and goods which
were not to be so treated. Further, the application of
the doctrine of Continuous Voyage or Ultimate Destina-
tion to Absolute Contraband only (except in cases of
countries without a seaboard) laid down in the Declara-
tion of London was illogical and failed. It has been
sald that the distinction between absolute and conditional
contraband goods is more specious than real, and this
proved to be the case under the conditions prevailing
5 See post, Chap. V.
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