INR EXAM 2 (chap 5-9) Flashcards
Institutions that help their members cooperate military in the event of a war
alliances
a situation in which the military capabilities if two states or groups of states are roughly equal
balance of power
a strategy in which states join forces with the stronger side of a conflict
bandwagoning
the risk of being dragged into an unwanted war because of the opportunistic actions of an ally
entrapment
An alliance formed in 1949 among the US, Canada, and most of Western Europe in response to the threat posed by the Soviet Union… attack on any is an attack on all
NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization)
A collective security organization founded in 1919 after WW1, the league ended in 1946 and then was replaced by the UN.
League of Nations
A collective security organization founded in 1945 after WW2, With over 190 recognized member states
United Nations
Broad-based institutions that promote peace and security among their members. Examples include the League of Nations and the UN
collective security organization
Intentional and systematic killing aimed at eliminating an identifiable group of people, such as ethnic or religious group
genocide
Interventions designed to relieve humanitarian cries stemming from conflicts or large-scale human rights abuses
humanitarian interventions
The main governing body of the UN, which has the authority to identify threats to international peace and security and to prescribe the org’s response including military or economic santions
Security Council (UNSC)
the five members of the UN security council: US, Great Britain, France, Russia (formerly USSR), and China
permanent 5 (P5)
the ability to prevent the passage of a measure through a unilateral act, such as a single negative vote
veto power
a military operation in which force is used to make and/or enforce peace among warring parties that have not agreed to end their fighting
peace-enforcement operation
an operation in which troops and observers are deployed to monitor a cease-fire or peace agreement
peacekeeping operation
a war in which the main participants are within the same state, such as the government and a rebel
civil war
the use or threatened use of violence against noncombatant targets by individuals or nonstate group for political ends
terrorism
armed conflict between actors with highly unequal military capabilities, such as when rebel groups or terrorists fight strong states
asymmetrical warfare
an actor that seeks to create an independent state on territory that carved from an existing state
separatist
an actor that seeks to detach from a region from on country and attach it to another, usually because of shared ethnic or religious ties
irredentist
conflicts in which tow opposing states “fight” by supporting opposite sides in a war, such as the government and rebels in a third state
proxy war
a military strategy in which small, often lightly armed units engage in hit-and-run attacks against military government and civilian targets
insurgency
actors whose interests are not widely shared by others; individuals or groups that are politically weak relative to the demands they make
extremists
a strategy of imposing or threatening to impose costs on other actors in order to induce a change in their behavior
coercion
a strategy of terrorist attacks intended to PROVOKE the target government into making disproportionate response that alienates moderates in the terrorists’ home society or in our sympathetic audiences
provocation
a strategy of terrorist attacks intended to sabotage a prospective peace between the target and moderate leadership from the terrorists’ home society
spoiling