Deterrence failure and war (7) Flashcards
what is deterrence theory?
“deterrence is dissuasion by threat.”
It works by threatening a cost on an attacker great enough so that they won’t attack: if you attack me, I will inflict a cost on you so great you will not be willing to go to war.
a theory that predicts not war, but peace, when one side is able to keep another from attacking it.
what is the goal of deterrence theory
keep war from happening rather than winning a war. can be seen as a method of defence
what is the difference between conventional weapons to deter and non-conventional
Conventional= weapons such as tanks, ships, airplanes
non-conventinal= chemical weapons, nuclear weapons weapon of mass destruction
what are the two type of deterrence, in terms of geolocalisation?
Local deterrence ( deter an attack upon one-self ), extended deterrence ( deter an attack upon an ally)
what is the credibility problem in extended deterrence?
When an ally is defended, the enemy may attack believing that the deterring state is not really serious about defending its ally.
is deterrence a descriptive theory?
no, it is actually the policy of keeping other states from attacking the state itself or its allies.
what are the two types of deterrence?
o Immediate Deterrence: when one state seeks to actively deter a threat from another. Immediate deterrence failure is an attack by one state on the deterring state.
o General Deterrence Failure: when two states are not in confrontation because one state is so much weaker that there is no active confrontation.
what is RDT
Rational Deterrence Theory (RDT) is the political science theory that is used to estimate when deterrence succeeds or fails.
based on RDT, what are the 3 necessary causes for deterrence to succeed?
- 1- Capability: The state must have enough force to inflict unacceptable damage on the enemy.
o EG: The deterring state doesn’t need a larger army than the enemy, just to inflict a cost on the enemy than the enemy is not willing to suffer. - 2- Credibility: The enemy must believe that the state will use its force.
o (2-A): Create a credible commitment by burning the bridges: this a metaphor for the ancient practice of deploying an ancient army and then burning the bridges and thereby cutting off any chance of retreat: the soldiers therefore won or were killed.
o (2-B): Lowering the trip-wire threshold to stop salami tactics: salami tactics is a metaphor for consuming a large object a bit at a time so as not to provoke a reaction. - Communication. The deterrent threat must be communicated to the enemy or the enemy won’t know and the deterrent policy will not work.
All three of these must be present: if even one is missing, then deterrence will not succeed.
- Communication. The deterrent threat must be communicated to the enemy or the enemy won’t know and the deterrent policy will not work.
when does Nuclear weapons deter
when they have second-strike capability
what is the crystal ball effect ( nuclear weapons )
nuclear weapon make the consequences of nuclear war very understandable, and therefore they generally have deter crises and escalate those in which they are present.
- Nuclear weapons can create…
instability: meaning they can cause an outbreak of war, if there is an absence of second-strike capability: where one side has sufficient nuclear superiority to overcome the nuclear arsenal of the other:
o This creates a reciprocal fear of surprise attack that leads to attempts at mutual preemption and an outbreak of war.
what cant be deterred even by nuclear weapons
- Irrational leadership may not be deterable,
what is rationality of irrationality
States may pretend to be irrational (termed the rationality of irrationality) to compel adversaries to back down during crises (thereby risking an outbreak of war)
what is stability-instability paradox
- Perfect nuclear stability (termed the stability-instability paradox) is the outcome of two nuclear weapons arsenals cancelling each other out, and thereby making war safe at a lower level of conflict.
- There is evidence that states possessing nuclear weapons, even small “minimal deterrents” such as that possessed by China, which are involved in crises, are very reluctant to escalate.
Example: 1969 Russian-Chinese and 1999 India-Pakistan border conflicts.
_Even states possessing small nuclear arsenals, termed “minimal deterrents,” were powerful deterrents. A state needs sufficient nuclear weapons to destroy an adversary’s cities.