Notes For Posc 180
Notes For Posc 180
★ Defining War
○ war - an event that involves organized use of military power by at least two parties, reaching
a minimum threshold of severity
■ Interstate war - main participants are the states
■ Civil war - participants are within the same state; gov’t vs rebel
★ 3 Perspectives on Why Do Wars Occur
○ International Anarchy = wars; insecurity and competition for power
■ absence of a central authority = wars
■ States fight wars to:
● Increase their own power
● Counter the power of others
■ Two primary dynamics that can lead to war (realism):
● Preventive motive - desire to fight in order to prevent an enemy from
becoming relatively more powerful
● Security dilemma - arises when efforts that states make to defend themselves
cause other states to feel less secure; can lead to arms races and war because of
the fear of being attacked
○ Mistakes and Conceptions
■ decision makers inaccurately estimate their chances of winning or the costs that will
have to be paid
○ Wars Serve the Interests of Influential Groups
■ Wars are fought in spite of their costs because those costs do not fall on the actors who
call the shots
★ What do states fight over?
○ Territory
■ States come into conflict if more than one wants the same piece of territory
● it might contribute to the wealth of the state
● its military or strategic value
● valuable for ethnic, cultural, or historical reasons
○ Policies
■ one state enacts a policy that benefits it but harms the interests of another
■ state’s mistreatment of its own citizens
○ Regime Types
■ the composition of another country’s government
■ both superpowers intervened regularly in other states to prop up friendly governments
or to remove unfriendly ones
★ War as an Outcome of Bargaining Failure
○ Strategic interactions and bargaining
■ the kinds of disputes that lead to wars are often settled through institutional
mechanisms
■ Property disputes can be resolved by courts backed by effective police powers
■ turn to the legal system to solve the problem
■ policy disagreements and conflicting ideas over who should govern can be settled by
elections
■ interactions in which actors try to resolve disputes over the allocation of a good
● over the distribution of a disputed territory to determine whether there is a
division acceptable to both sides
● over each other’s policies so that objectionable ones might be modified or
eliminated
■ entailing compromise or give-and-take
○ crisis bargaining
■ at least one actor threatens to use force in the event that its demands are not met
■ coercive diplomacy - use of threats to advance specific demands in a bargaining
interaction
● Compellence - “Give me y, or else”, “Stop doing x, or else”
● Deterrence - “Don’t do x, or else”, “Don’t attack my ally x, or else”
○ The costs and likely outcome of a war determine which deals each side will consider
acceptable in crisis bargaining.
■ bargaining range - set of deals that both parties in a bargaining interaction prefer
over the reversion outcome; when the reversion outcome is war, the bargaining range
is the set of deals that both sides prefer over war
○ Leaders - make foreign policy decisions; decide when to make threats, what demands to issue,
and ultimately, whether to wage war; matter the most because, by whatever rules of politics
operate in their country, they have the authority to make these decisions
○ Bureaucracy - collection of organizations—including the military, diplomatic corps, and
intelligence agencies— that carry out most tasks of governance within the state.
○ interest groups - groups of individuals with common interests that organize to influence
public policy in a manner that benefits their members.
○ General public - most numerous but rarely the most powerful; the influence of ordinary
citizens varies considerably with domestic institutions
★ Do Politicians Spark Wars Abroad in Order to Hold On to Power at Home?
○ 1982 Argentina vs Great Britain
■ the islands were not particularly valuable pieces of territory
■ the war was surprising because of the imbalance in military power between the two
states
■ Why did Argentina pick a fight with such a formidable foe, and why did Britain react
so strongly to defend its right to islands that seemed to be of diminishing importance?
● domestic political interests of the countries’ governments
★ What do leaders want?
○ Leaders have:
■ varied interests of their own
■ personal motivations
○ How could these motivations affect leaders’ decisions about war and peace?
■ Responsiveness to the interest of those who control their political fate
■ Control of policies to shape their environment
★ Rally Effect and Diversionary Incentive
○ The tendency of people to become supportive of their regime when it encounters dramatic
international events, such as war.
○ Why do people rally around the flag at times of international crisis?
■ People feel greater attachment and loyalty (patriotism)
■ Political opponents may decide to dampen their criticism of the government in times
of national crisis, with government dominating political discourse
■ Diversionary tactics
■ Scapegoating (blame foreigners)
○ Rally effect can give leaders a diversionary incentive.
■ a temptation to spark an international crisis in order to rally public support at home
○ Gambling for resurrection
★ Do Leaders “Wag the Dog”?
○ Inconclusive evidence
○ Leaders do not systematically use international conflict for diversionary purposes or to
gamble for resurrection.
★ The Political Costs of War
○ Why might diversionary effects be weak?
■ war can impose domestic political costs in addition to promising benefits
○ One way to see the relationship between the costs of war and its domestic political
repercussions is to consider how public support for war changes as the costs mount
★ Do Countries Fight Wars to Satisfy the Military or Special Interest Groups?
○ Alternative perspective: Wars are fought to benefit military and business interests
○ “Industrial-Military Complex”
■ alliance between military leaders and the industries that benefit from international
conflict, such as arms manufacturers
■ have hawkish interests - anticipate the benefits of war and pay few costs for it.
★ Bureaucratic Politics and the Military
○ Decisions about war and peace are shaped not only by state leaders but also by the interests of
the bureaucratic organizations involved in the decision-making process (e.g., military,
diplomats and foreign ministry, intelligence community).
○ The military is usually the most influential bureaucratic actor in matters of war and
peace.
○ Compelling (albeit incomplete) argument that the more influence the military has over
foreign policy decision-making, the more belligerent the state will be. Why?
■ Ideological - leaders in the armed forces may be predisposed to seeing military
solutions to foreign policy problems, overestimating the effectiveness of force relative
to other alternatives
■ Organizational - the military can demand larger budgets and more personnel when
the state is frequently engaged in international conflict than when it is at peace
■ Professional - military officers find that combat experience is crucial to being
promoted to the highest ranks
★ Interest Groups: Economic and Ethnic Lobby
○ Businesses with investments abroad may influence the foreign policy decisions of the state.
○ Business groups may try to influence foreign policy to protect their interests.
○ Interest groups that organize around ethnic ties are another influence on foreign policy.
○ Not all interest groups lobby for hostile actions; some prefer peaceful cooperation/relations
with foreign countries.
★ How Can Small Groups Have a Big Influence on Policy?
○ The answer lies in the nature of the interactions between these different actors and the
institutions that regulate their relations.
■ How could economic interest groups “hijack” a state’s foreign policy for their own narrow
interests?
● “Precisely because taxpayers are more numerous, the costs of intervention to
any individual are quite low. As a result, no individual citizen has much
incentive to become informed about the situation, to call a member of
Congress to weigh in on the policy, to go to Washington to bang on the doors
of the State Department, and so on.”
★ How Do Domestic Interests Affect International Bargaining?
○ that domestic interests affect the likelihood of international conflict primarily by determining
the extent of the state’s ambitions
★ Why Don’t Democracies Fight One Another?
○ Democratic peace refers to a well - established observation that there are few, if any, clear cases
of war between mature democratic states.
○ Is this absence of wars among democracies a coincidence, or is there something about democratic
institutions that facilitates peaceful relations among states that have them? In what ways might
shared democracy influence interstate bargaining?
■ two broad ways in which domestic institutions can affect the likelihood of war:
● by influencing the interests of states and their leaders
● by influencing the bargaining interaction between and among countries
■ democracy - political system in which candidates compete for political office through
frequent, fair elections in which a sizable portion of the adult population can vote.
● the ability of different individuals and groups to compete for political office
● the ability of a large portion of the people to participate in the selection
process through voting
● Liberal - a philosophy that emphasizes the value of individual liberty
■ autocracy - political system in which an individual or small group exercises power
with few constraints and no meaningful competition or participation by the general
public.
★ Representation, Accountability, and Interest in War
○ Domestic institutions shape leaders’ interests in war and peace.
○ The costs of war are paid by society at large but generally not by the leader who makes
the decision to wage war. The leader (esp. autocracies), by contrast, rarely has such direct
exposure to the costs of war.
○ Democratic institutions align the interests of the ruler with the ruled, through
representative institutions
○ Accountability: the ability to punish or reward leaders for their decisions
○ Constraints on the use of force can make democratic states appear to be tempting targets to
their nondemocratic foes.
★ Democracy and the Bargaining Interaction
○ How do democratic institutions affect bargaining interaction?
■ Transparency
■ Ability to send credible signals
★ Does Democracy Cause Peace?
○ Other possible explanations:
■ Democracy and peace may be sharing a common cause: economic development
(“capitalist peace”).
■ Peace causes democracy (reverse)
■ Peace as shared strategic interests of democratic states, despite their domestic
institutions