Military Sanctions are a series of onerous steps designed to make an offending regime halt it's bad behavior and act responsibly. A successful example would be the world navies anti-piracy patrols off the Somali coast that ended the hijacking-for-ransom so popular with the Somali pirates.
There are various types of sanctions, including diplomatic sanctions that involve actions such as withdrawing ambassadors, economic sanctions that restrict trade or access to financial markets, military sanctions that involve the use of force, and individual sanctions that target specific individuals or entities. Sanctions can also be categorized as targeted or comprehensive, depending on the scope of the measures imposed.
All of the above
Pakistan
Usually through international pressure such as trade sanctions and occasionally military action.
The US does not control Cuba. There are military sanctions against the island.
They can proclaim embargoes and sanctions, but the UN has no military forces; military forces have to be provided by nations. The nations involved can enforce the sanctions or ignore them, or anything in between. If some nation wants to enforce sanctions and embargoes, and another nation wants to evade these actions, then there's a potential for military conflict. For example, if the UN were to impose sanctions on Russia and an embargo on Crimea, any attempt of the USA to enforce embargo would likely lead to conflict. That's why Barack Obama has proposed only incredibly tiny and ineffectual sanctions on Russia; Vladimir Putin wouldn't stand for it. With the rapidly declining American military and the expansion of Russian military might, if push came to shove, the USA would suffer an embarrassing defeat and humiliation. And both Putin and Obama know it.
The UN imposed economic sanctions on Iraq after the 1991 Gulf War primarily to compel the Iraqi government to comply with UN resolutions, particularly regarding the disarmament of its weapons of mass destruction and the cessation of aggressive military actions. The sanctions aimed to weaken Saddam Hussein's regime by crippling the economy and limiting its ability to fund military operations. Additionally, the sanctions were intended to signal international condemnation of Iraq's invasion of Kuwait and to restore regional stability. Despite their intention, the sanctions had severe humanitarian consequences for the Iraqi population.
The UN issues resolutions which can enforce sanctions (economic or military), condemn, or go as far as authorising military action against aggressor states.
Policies used by one country to try and control another are called 'sanctions'.Normally in the form of economic sanctions such as a ban on trade, these usually exclude food and medicine.There can are also be international sanctions imposed by a country or a group of countries against another country in order to elicit a change in their behavior.
Sometimes it worked but other times they found themselves using econominc sanctions (stop trading with a county) and if that didnt work then they would use military sanctions (attacking another country).
America's response to Japanese expansion in Asia, particularly through economic sanctions and trade restrictions, severely limited Japan's access to vital resources, especially oil and steel. This created a sense of desperation as Japan relied heavily on imports for its military and industrial needs. Faced with the threat of crippling shortages and the potential loss of their imperial ambitions, Japanese leaders felt compelled to pursue aggressive military actions, ultimately leading to the attack on Pearl Harbor. The sanctions thus intensified Japan's urgency to secure resources through military conquest.
The League of Nations had three kinds of sanctions:Verbal sanctions amounted to a warning.Economic sanctions could include a boycott or embargo.Military sanctions could include war.