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Posts from the ‘War’ Category

What’s Up with the Heated Foreign Policy on the Korean Peninsula?

Park Geun-hye. Image via Wikimedia.

Park Geun-hye. Image via Wikimedia.

By Will H. Moore

Political scientists used to be interested in the extent to which bellicose (or cooperative) foreign policy behavior influenced other countries’ foreign policy behavior. The existence of the post-World War II nuclear world/Cold War and Lewis Fry Richardson’s arms race model led some scholars to estimate governments’ reactions to one another’s bellicose and cooperative foreign policy (e.g., MD Ward 1982; 1981 [gated]). The demise of the Cold War has largely relegated this work, which had never gained considerable attention, to the dustbin, which is a shame.

It seems to me that the recent tensions between North and South Korea provide reason to reflect on that work. The “crisis” has garnered considerable attention: the US Council on Foreign Relations has produced a Crisis Guide: The Korean Peninsula, and coverage aggregation pages can be found at the websites of the major international news outlets. Andrew Kydd recently posted on this blog an assessment that the crisis is largely North Korean driven, and unlikely to be of great concern. This seems to be a fairly widely shared view (e.g., Damien Tomkins at Foreign Policy), but Scott Wolford recently posted on his blog an argument drawing on his research (here and here) that he calls the Turnover Trap, which strikes me as considerably more compelling. According to Wolford, “both sides in this interaction—the new leader and her opponent—have every incentive to ratchet up tensions.”

Kim Jung-un.

Kim Jung-un.

Wolford argues that a leader new to office has an incentive to establish his mettle (i.e., resolve) by engaging in costly, but not too costly, behavior. Ratcheting up tensions — rattling one’s saber by engaging in provocative military exercises, making provocative threats, etc. — is not strictly “cheap talk” because it raises the risk of war. Wolford argues that true “doves” will find it too costly to continue to raise the stakes in such a saber rattling contest. This is important because it leads Wolford to argue that both sides of a rivalry have an incentive to rattle their sabers when a newbie arrives in office: while the newbie needs to establish his mettle, the veteran wants to know whether the newbie is a “dove” or a “hawk,” and to smoke out the newbie the veteran can rattle her saber and watch how the newbie responds. If the newbie folds, he is a “dove.” If not, he is a “hawk.” Either way, the newbie’s type is revealed and the veteran will be able to use that information in future “crisis bargaining” with the newbie.

“What does this mean for tensions on the peninsula? Let’s note first that both North and South Korea have relatively new incumbents… So we’ve got two new leaders with dual incentives to ratchet up tensions on the peninsula.”

That’s a rather different explanation than what I have seen elsewhere, which focuses exclusively on North Korea, though Wolford forecasts a similarly sanguine conclusion, saying this Dual Turnover Trap:

“need not portend war, even if raising tensions really does say something more meaningful than mere cheap talk; both sides merely want to demonstrate how willing they are to countenance it, not actually get into a scrape. In fact, costly signaling and reputation-building are designed to produce more favorable peaceful outcomes. However, actions like this often come with a price tag of some elevated (albeit from a very low baseline) risk of conflict. Once each side learns a sufficient amount about the other, though, we should expect to see tensions winding down—barring, of course, any other shocks to the system.”

What the heck does any of this have to do with Richardson-type models of foreign policy behavior, the topic of the first paragraph of this post? Unlike virtually all other statistical IR studies, the coefficients in these models reveal information about states’ behavioral responses to other states’ behavior (behavior is almost exclusively modeled statistically as a function of structures: things that individual actors cannot unilaterally change or do). Wolford’s argument suggests that when a leadership change occurs in a country that has an international rival, both the newbie and the veteran will have greater bellicose responsiveness to one anothers’ behavior than the two countries did prior. Further, it suggests that the bump in bellicose responsiveness will be short lived. Richardson-type models permit one to estimate bellicose responsiveness: that is precisely what the coefficients represent (see Ward’s early work, and the studies he cites or cite his work).

Fair warning: this is the part where I go all “stats geek” on you. We can say something more precise than the above: what Wolford’s argument specifically suggests is that the bellicose responsiveness of states varies as a function of the entry of a new leader into office in countries that have long standing disputes with one another. One can build a random coefficient variant of a Richardson-type model to estimate this across many countries. If Wolford is correct, then the period after a newbie enters office should produce an increase in that coefficient, which should then dampen over time. Political scientists generally, and IR scholars in particular, estimate few random coefficient models (aside from fixed/random effects, though see S Rajmaira & MD Ward 1990 [gated]). I suspect that this has largely due to the conjunction of limited computing capacity (which has effectively dissipated) and relatively weak (non-specific) theories (which are also beginning to wane). We may well see more and more explanations of this sort coupled with statistical models that permit coefficients to vary as a function of covariates.

@WilHMoo

Political Violence Thought of the Week

By Erica Chenoweth

UN Photo by Marie Frechon.

UN Photo by Marie Frechon.

Why would Syrian rebels abduct UN peacekeepers stationed in the Golan Heights? Here are two potential reasons:

  1. Provocation. The Syrian rebels — or at least this faction of the rebels — want to provoke more international involvement in Syria’s conflict. The rebel group responsible claims that it will continue to hold the 20 or so abducted UN peacekeepers until the Syrian army withdraws from the Golan Heights. This is a slightly strange demand and is a dubious strategy for several reasons. First, I highly doubt that protecting UN peacekeepers is high on Bashar al-Assad’s list of priorities. Assad is already no friend of the UN and probably feels that Russia and Iran’s stable backing keeps him relatively well-defended from international pressure. In other words, this provocation is not likely to move Assad at all. It is, however, more likely to provoke outrage on behalf of the international community, and fears that the conflict will spill over into Syria’s already fragile neighborhood. The Syrian rebels have long sought to influence international outrage and to push it to such a degree that major powers would intervene with more force. I think this is the most likely explanation for this incident, but contrary to rebels’ expectations, I doubt that it will work.
  2. Accident. We don’t always acknowledge the importance of accidents, coincidences, or incidental violence in the course of conflicts. Observers seem to think that major incidents like this are deliberate — designed with strategic intentions and meant to have some kind of strategic impact. But given the complexity, confusion, and “fog” of war, it may be just as likely that a group of rebels happened upon this outpost, and someone in the group thought it would be a good idea to occupy it and detain its inhabitants to use as leverage.

Incidental or not, this action is not likely to improve the strategic standing of the Syrian rebels. The prime narrative in the US, at least, is that “we still don’t know who these rebels are.” Engaging in actions like this do little to elicit further sympathy from the international community; instead, they just make the conflict look like more of a mess to avoid.

Postcard from West Point

By Oliver Kaplan

Photo by Oliver Kaplan.

Photo by Oliver Kaplan.

Last month I was honored to participate in the 64th annual SCUSA conference (Student Conference on US Affairs) at the US Military Academy in West Point, New York. The conference is a venue where college students from around the country (both American and foreign) spend four days at West Point to debate various foreign policy topics and foster positive civil-military relations from an early age.

The theme of this year’s conference was appropriately “Leading in Lean Times: Assuring Accountability and Assessing American Priorities in an Age of Austerity.” I was a faculty co-chair of the roundtable on Latin America, and the students in our group were hard-pressed to devise foreign policies (both conventional and unconventional) that would promote US priorities in the region without breaking the bank.

As part of the experience, the college students sleep in the barracks and eat in the mess hall, literally getting a taste for what military life is like. For their part, the military cadets get a chance to remember what civilians are like.

Photo by Oliver Kaplan.

Photo by Oliver Kaplan.

Donning my social scientist hat, I came away with two main observations about the interactions among the students:

  1. The cadets motivated the civilian college students to push their limits of endurance (discipline?) and to stay goal-oriented (complete the mission) as group members collaborated non-stop for three days to produce a policy paper.
  2. The college students pushed the cadets to think outside the box and question conventional wisdom and authority (at least once in a while).

I certainly benefitted from an extra dose of both of those things, and I’m sure we all could!

I highly recommend the conference to all students (and faculty) as a great way to meet wonderful, engaging people and get an insider’s view of one of our nation’s finest educational institutions and training grounds for military officers.

Invest in Minesweepers

By Andrew Kydd

AKA one of one of these. USN photo by Photographer's Mate 1st Class Michelle R. Hammond, via Wikimedia.

AKA one of one of these. USN photo by Photographer’s Mate 1st Class Michelle R. Hammond, via Wikimedia.

I just attended an interesting forum sponsored by MadPac, the UW Madison pro-Israel group, on the Iranian nuclear situation. It’s always a pleasure to exchange ideas with my colleagues, Jon Pevehouse and Nadav Shelef, and it gave me a chance think about where we stand on this topic now that the US election is over. Increasingly, I think we are headed for a confrontation for two main reasons.

First, President Obama has committed himself to military action to stop or at least slow down Iranian acquisition of nuclear weapons. Presidents often make threats. These threats are argued to help commit a president to future action because if a leader backs down after making a threat he or she will suffer “audience costs”, that is, a loss of popularity. The idea is that the public, or at least some sectors of it, dislikes bluffing. Whether this is true or not is still somewhat up for grabs, although there is some survey and experimental evidence to support the idea. Because they don’t want to pay audience costs, presidents often make their threats vague, so they can weasel out of them if need be. Obama, however, has made his threats crystal clear. The main alternative to preventive strike is a policy of containment, that is, learning to live with the Iranian bomb. Obama has explicitly and repeatedly ruled this out, saying that the policy is not containment, but preventing Iran from getting a nuclear weapon. Of course, presidents sometimes bluff and back down. George W. Bush declared that a North Korean bomb was unacceptable, but vowing we would ne’er consent, we consented. However, Obama’s threat has been much more explicit than Bush’s, and the Israelis and Republicans will certainly hold his feet to the fire. Obama has also acknowledged that the window in which this could be achieved, absent a reversal on the part of Iran, is about a year. Therefore 2013 would appear to be the year of decision.

Second, Iran would prefer to have the US destroy its nuclear facilities rather than back down. This part of the argument is necessarily more speculative. It seems quite plausible, though. To back down in the face of US and Israeli threats would be to capitulate before the Great Satan. It would mean an enormous loss of prestige for the Islamic regime. Standing fast and enduring an airstrike, in contrast, would be an enormous propaganda victory. The perfidy of the Great Satan would be clear for all to see, Iranians would at least temporarily rally around the flag, and the regime could rededicate itself to rebuild the lost facilities and resume Iran’s progress towards nuclear capability. It might even provide an opportunity to openly embrace the goal of nuclear weapons, the need for which would be demonstrated by the airstrikes. The loss of the uranium enrichment facilities themselves is comparatively unimportant, because they have no direct value apart from their ability to provide fissile material for nuclear weapons. This value would be lost anyway if Iran were to capitulate to international pressure and agree to a deal that prevented it from enriching uranium to weapons grade. Therefore the payoff for Iran, as far as the enrichment facilities goes, is the same whether it capitulates or sees them destroyed in an airstrike. In either case, they fail to achieve their purpose. Thus the propaganda factor easily tips the balance in favor of resistance.

So I’m betting on conflict in the Persian Gulf in 2013. Any promising startups in the mine detection business?

What Israel’s Prohibition on Targeted Killings Means for US Counterterrorism

Guest post by Sara Bjerg Moller

Israeli strike aircraft. USAF photo by Master Sergeant Kevin J. Gruenwald, via Wikimedia.

Israeli strike aircraft. USAF photo by Master Sergeant Kevin J. Gruenwald, via Wikimedia.

The most surprising development in last month’s ceasefire agreement between Hamas and Israel may not be how quickly it disintegrates, but rather the Netanyahu government’s acquiescence to the long-standing Palestinian demand that the Israeli Defense Forces halt targeted assassinations.
Item one of the seven-bullet agreement calls for Israel to stop all hostilities in the Gaza Strip, including the “targeting of individuals”. Although not much remarked upon in the international press, the declaration marks a major turning point in Israel’s counterterrorism doctrine.

Targeting terrorists for “extrajudicial punishment” has long been a favored instrument in the Israeli counterterrorism toolbox. While Israel made many concessions as part of the 1993 Oslo agreement (including ending military action against members of the Palestinian Liberation Organization), assassinations targeting Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad members opposed to the peace process continued. The Israeli human rights group B’Tselem estimates that more than 210 terrorists were killed in targeted assassinations during the first six years of the intifada.

According to Palestinian accounts, it was this month’s assassination of Qassam Brigades commander Ahmad Jabari (the man responsible for the kidnapping of Gilad Shalit) that prompted the latest round of fighting. (The Israeli government argues the action was justified by the hundreds of rockets that have rained down on southern Israel over the past year.) Israel’s promise to suspend targeted assassinations, the first of its kind, is therefore noteworthy.

For years, Israel’s stated objective behind their targeted killing policy has been deterrence. As terrorism expert (and fellow contributor) Daniel Byman has noted, Israel believed the benefits of this policy outweighed the costs. Killing the men responsible for the deaths of Israeli citizens sent an important message, one that the government of Israel believed was worth sending in spite of the widespread international opprobrium and reported benefits to terrorist recruitment that inevitably followed every action.

It is an open question whether Israel was prompted to take this action for political reasons (Netanyahu has openly stated that he agreed to the ceasefire after speaking on the telephone with President Obama) or because it believes targeted killings are failing to have the intended deterrent effect.

Part of the confusion may stem from a strategic failure on the part of the Israelis to properly articulate the difference between deterrence and compellence. Though both coercive instruments, the latter, as Nobel laureate Thomas Schelling noted half a century ago, is intended to make an adversary do something. IN contrast, deterrence aims at preventing an adversary from starting something. Israel’s stated policy of targeting killings, designed to compel Hamas to stop firing rockets into Israel, thus falls into the category of compellence.

Despite this confusion, Israeli circles have long debated the merits of targeted killings. On one side stand those who believe it represents the most important method of fighting terror; on the other, those who question whether peace can be won by killing terrorists.

Israel’s decision to shift course — after decades in the terrorist killing business — should be cause for retrospection among American counterterrorism officials debating the merits of drone warfare. Although newer to the game, the US has embraced the killing of al Qaeda figures in recent years, arguing their deaths strike a blow at the global terrorist movement and make Americans safer.

However, American public justifications for the targeted killing policy are made on slightly different grounds than those used by Israel. US officials have emphasized dismantling terror network and punishing those responsible for killing Americans, rather than Israel’s graduated deterrence strategy. Americans have also been slower to publicly debate the benefits and costs of the policy. When former Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney suggested that America “can’t kill itself out of this mess” in the Middle East, the backlash was instantaneous.

Regardless of whether the ceasefire agreement fails and Israel returns to its policy of targeted killings or not, Israel’s willingness to abandon this tactic in favor of a chance at a truce marks a fundamental shift in counterterrorism doctrine. Should the truce fail, Israel will no doubt adopt the tactic once more. But an important precedent has been set. Today both sides can expect the demand that Israel halt the targeting of individuals to be a requirement for all future ceasefires.

Meanwhile, the likely effect of the precedent will be to provide free rein to Hamas’ senior officials. The group has already vowed to continue to stock weapons during the ceasefire interim, and shows no evidence of an inclination to get out of the business of terror.

As for why Netanyahu would agree to such a condition in the first place, one possibility is that he is playing for time. By acquiescing to Hamas’ terms now, Netanyahu may hope to bank credit with the US president in a future Palestinian (or Iranian?) crisis.

Given this dramatic turnaround we should be asking ourselves whether Israel’s changed stance reflects just another effort in a long line of attempts to reach an agreement with the Palestinians or whether the Israelis may know something we don’t and, after decades of being in the business of killing terrorists, no longer believe the benefits outweigh the costs.

Sara Bjerg Moller is a Ph.D. Candidate at Columbia University and a Research Fellow at the Mortara Center for International Studies at Georgetown University.

A Zombie Thought Experiment for Women in Combat

By Will H. Moore

The American Civil Liberties Union has filed a lawsuit on behalf of four American female soldiers challenging the US military’s “combat exclusion policy” which bars female soldiers from serving in combat roles. In his award winning 2001 book, War and Gender, Joshua Goldstein exhaustively documents this topic, and I direct the interested reader to his excellent work. I am interested here in neither the specifics of the legal, nor the force effectiveness, issues. Instead I propose a thought experiment that I believe can serve as a useful “litmus test” that reveals whether a given person’s opinion on the “combat exclusion policy” is driven by genuine concern for force effectiveness, or is really driven by normative beliefs about social gender roles.

Imagine that you are a member of a mixed-gender group of human survivors during a zombie apocalypse.

AMC’s The Walking Dead. Image via Entertainment Weekly.

Consider these three questions:

  1. Do you oppose the female members of your group (including yourself, if relevant) taking what on hand might serve as a weapon and participating in repelling a zombie assault?
  2. Is the size of the group relevant to your view (e.g., shifting from say 100 to three)?
  3. Does your view shift due to the male to female ratio matter (shifting from a single female member to a single male member)?

If, in all of the above scenarios, you are opposed to women partaking in battle, your views on the combat exclusion policy are definitely driven by a firm belief that female human beings lower the force effectiveness of groups in battle. If your views shift across one or more scenarios, well…

Give it some thought.

@WilHMoo

Justice as Obstruction in Gaza and Israel

Guest Post by Boaz Atzili

Here we go again. “Israel has the right to defend itself.” So said US President Barack Obama on Sunday in response to the recent escalation, repeating Israel’s own justification for its massive aerial campaign against the Gaza Strip.

Well, of course it does. But does this mean it has to apply the same medicine that does not work again and again? Does this mean it is should “destroy the infrastructure of terror” for the billionth time? “Palestinians have the right to defend themselves!” we often hear from the other side. Well, of course they do. But since when does committing suicide count as defense?

Herein lies the key to understanding the current conflagration around Gaza, and to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict more broadly. Justice (or rather a lopsided blind version of it) has replaced strategy as the logic of action. Righteous propaganda has been a part of most conflicts. In the Israeli-Palestinian case, however, the propaganda penetrates much deeper. “I have the right to do it” rather than “it is in my interest to do it” becomes the story Israelis and Palestinians are telling themselves, not only outsiders. And this kind of reasoning blocks compromise, which is the sin-qua-non of peace.

More than anything else, the conflict has become a competition in victimization. Like children in kindergarten, Israelis and Palestinians repeatedly point to the cycle of escalating violence, each shouting loudly “he started it!” At the same time that both sides compete to prove to the world that they are the true victims of violence, they also compete in the rhetoric of threats. The results would be comic if they were not so tragic.

Israel, for instance, rightly emphasizes the suffering of the civilian residents of the cities, towns, and kibbutzim of the south. For the last seven years, since its forces retreated from Gaza (and even before) these citizens live in daily fear, and frequently have to sit in shelters or run for cover from Palestinian rockets. Children are traumatized and parents are scared to send their kids to school. It’s true Palestinian militants have been firing thousands such rockets on Israel in the last few years. But it’s only part of the truth, since the lives of civilians on the other side of the fence are much less tolerable. The people of the Gaza Strip too suffer from frequent attacks coming unannounced from above. Israeli drones and helicopters armed with Hellfire missiles are a daily presence in their sky. Their children too are traumatized, and much more so, since Israel’s attacks kill at a much greater frequency. Regardless of the targets of Israel’s attacks, the “collateral damage” is often high — a lethal price paid by civilians.

But righteousness is not the sin of Israelis alone. Palestinians in Gaza often decry the loss of civilian lives; the children and elderly who are hurt when Israel supposedly targets militants. And they have good reasons to do so. But then they typically follow by demanding their leaders to throw even more rockets at Israel, which are generally aimed at Israel’s civilian population. The fact that these rockets are much less accurate and much less effective than Israeli weapons, and that Israelis have better defenses, does not negate the irony here: if targeting civilians is unacceptable, it is unacceptable whether it succeeds or it fails.

As soon as Israelis and Palestinians start to consider defending their people rather than defending their pretentious moral high ground, they will find there is in fact somebody to talk to on the other side. A real dialogue about building peace that moves beyond the sins of the past is necessary for any true long-term reconciliation. But at this stage, if the aim is to stop escalation and reach a reasonable compromise, these one-sided and blind notions of justice are obstructing rather than helping. If the aim is to actually defend a people rather than claim moral victory, being smart is better than being loud.

Justice is not worth it if it leads to future generations of agony and grieving. A real resolution to the conflict will be future-oriented rather than past-oriented and will necessarily be based on compromise. Neither side will see compromise as perfectly just, but both sides can — and must — learn to live with it.

* Boaz Atzili is an Assistant Professor at the School of International Service, American University, Washington DC. He is the author of Good Fences, Bad Neighbors: Border Fixity and International Conflict .

Political Violence Today

By Steve Saideman

Photo Steven L. Shepard, Presidio of Monterey Public Affairs, via Flickr.

It is somewhat strange how things tend to come together. This Sunday marked Remembrance Day in Canada and Veterans Day in the US, and was remembered throughout Europe as the anniversary of the end of World War I. But I started thinking about the futility of force Sunday morning when Bruce Springsteen’s version of “War” — “War? What is it good for?” — popped up on my iPad while I was doing the dishes. This timing resonated even more because I got to hang out a few days ago with this blog’s co-founder, Erica Chenoweth, who has written a pretty convincing book on the efficacy of non-violent protest.

I shared a story with her about the first time I appeared on a panel in front of an audience of ordinary folks (as opposed to academic types). It was 1993, the topic was Yugoslavia, and a mixed group of panelists were featured: a Serb nationalist, a Serb leftist, a Croat, a Bosnian Muslim, a representative from the Catholic Church, and me. Oh, and a pacifist. The audience agreed with me: “yes, the other side is being manipulated by its leaders” AND they piled heaps of verbal abuse on the pacifist.

So, violence and non-violence was on my mind even before Springsteen wailed about war Sunday morning. We remember the sacrifices of those who fought for our various countries today, the anniversary of the end of the War that was to end all wars is worth marking. World War I was just about our species’ most futile war; both in how it was fought on the Western Front, and in its outcomes. The war produced a peace that created the dynamics that would lead to a second and more conclusive World War, a new government to the east of Germany that would commit tremendous violence before, during and after that next World War, and so on.

Today, with 2014 appears closer on the horizon and as “green-on-blue” attacks continue, success in Afghanistan seem either elusive or temporary. The events in Libya this fall suggest that intervention produces mixed results at best, so perhaps we should not have intervened. These experiences raise serious questions about the efficacy of force.

So, were the sacrificed lives we remember today wasted? It depends on who you ask. If you talk to someone in Sarajevo, who has contempt for the UN but very positive views about NATO, the answer is a bit different. Sure, Bosnia has not made much progress since 1996, but the country has seen little violence. Indeed, in 2001-2002 we measured violent acts in Bosnia by counting hay-stack burnings — which had economic implications (a farmer’s savings), but was not awful as the horrific violence which preceded NATO’s intervention. Kosovo is hardly a perfect country, but the Albanians are Kosovo are certainly better off than they were under Milosevic’s Serbia.

When it comes to Afghanistan, it is becoming clearer that whatever progress the Canadians, the Americans and other invested nations have made in the country is not sustainable without them. But that does not mean that lives were not saved during the intervention. If we only measure the change in infant mortality rates and in deaths of women giving birth, it is clear that Afghanistan, despite how awful it may remain, is a better place now than ten years ago.

It should be clear from this rambling that I am pretty ambivalent about the use of force. Violence is not always the answer to a policy problem, but I don’t think that it is never the answer, either. If we remember the debates of the late 1990’s, the concern was not that we didn’t intervene too much but that we fell far short in Rwanda. World War I paints war as futile, but World War II makes it appear necessary. However, it is not so easy to sort the “good” wars from the “bad” wars these days; Afghanistan was the good war until it was not, and Iraq was the bad war that may have produced the more stable outcome.

So, where does this leave us? I think we remain in the land of bad choices, where using and not using force both have tremendously complicated consequences. This weekend brings news of Israel returning over the border the Syrian war’s spilled over. So, the violence will not end there, or elsewhere. I guess the best we can do is try to plan and execute war plans and peace plans so that the use of violence is limited, more discriminate, and more effective.

Civilian Casualties, Democracy & Wealthy Countries

By Will H. Moore

NYU Press has published a provocative book by Yagil Levy titled Israel’s Death Hierarchy: Casualty Aversion in a Militarized Democracy. The blurb on the NYU Press website states:

“In Israel’s Death Hierarchy, Yagil Levy uses Israel as a compelling case study to explore the global dynamics and security implications of casualty sensitivity. Israel, Levy argues, originally chose to risk soldiers mobilized from privileged classes, more than civilians and other soldiers. However, with the mounting of casualty sensitivity, the state gradually restructured what Levy calls its “death hierarchy” to favor privileged soldiers over soldiers drawn from lower classes and civilians, and later to place enemy civilians at the bottom of the hierarchy by the use of heavy firepower. The state thus shifted risk from soldiers to civilians.”

Levy makes use of testimonies from the Israeli NGO Breaking the Silence, which collects testimonies of Israeli Defence Forces (IDF) soldiers about their experiences (he has also published a co-authored study using a subset of those testimonies by women of the IDF). Keep your eye out for reviews of the book: as of yet, I have been unable to find any.

I am interested in generalizing a bit, and then reflecting on the implications of such a generalization for US policy and, particularly, drones. I trust the reader will stipulate that capital-intensive militaries are better able to project force outside of the range of counter-fire than labor-intensive militaries (for example, flying a plane above the level of counter-fire that can drop ordinance from that safe distance). I further anticipate that the reader will stipulate that, all other things constant, the greater the distance at which ordinance is delivered, the greater the likelihood that (some of) it will strike civilians. Let’s set those two claims aside as background, and explore some other implications of wealth and democracy upon the likely incidence of war crimes: specifically, accepting that civilian casualties can be classified as “collateral damage.”

Consider, first, wealthy states versus poor states. Wealthy states tend to have considerably greater returns to capital than labor, and hence will invest, on average, in more capital-intensive militaries. Capital intensive militaries will place a greater value, on average, upon labor than will labor intensive militaries as each unit of labor in a capital-intensive military tends to produce more firepower than a unit of labor in a labor intensive military. This chain of points suggests that wealthy states should, on average, be more likely to deploy and use weapons systems consistent with the grisly calculus suggested by Levy: the lives of soldiers of the wealthy country will be weighted as more valuable than the lives of civilians living in the target zone, which is to say that “collateral damage” will be more acceptable to commanders and politicians in wealthy states than in poor ones.

Consider now the impact of elections upon the trade-off between a co-national soldier’s life and a foreign civilians life. Scott Gartner has shown in a series of studies that Americans’ approval of the President are sensitive to casualties (e.g., here, here and here). To the extent that a leader holds office as a consequence of elections they have a greater incentive to value the lives of the soldiers under their command relative to those of civilians in a foreign land — who, of course, cannot vote — than a leader who does not have to face an electorate.

The implications are unpleasant: the arguments jointly suggest that democratically elected leaders of wealthy states will approve military systems and tactics that produce greater levels of civilian casualties, and will increasingly label them “collateral damage”. That democracy and wealth, often heralded as producing “good things,” also produce perverse outcomes, is a point all too often ignored. We have good reason to suspect increasing use, among militaries of democratic, wealthy countries, of weapons systems and tactics that shift the risk from soldiers to civilians.

Predator drone over Afghanistan. US Air Force photo by Lt Col Leslie Pratt, via Wikimedia.

I close with a confession: I have not yet read Levy’s book, so I am not certain that he argues that the rise of religiously conservative Jews in the IDF officer corps plays a role in the changes over time in the IDF’s rules of engagement. I am, however, familiar with such arguments, and while I am too ignorant of the internal dynamics within the IDF to usefully weigh in on that discussion, it is important to note that one need not appeal to such social dynamics to explain what we are witnessing. Democracy and wealth produce perfectly sound accounts on their own.

PS: I suspect, but have no evidence to support the claim, that US presidents who are perceived as foreign policy hawks are less sensitive to this grisly calculus than those perceived as foreign policy doves (i.e., that Republican presidents are less likely to accept “collateral damage” than are Democrats). That expectation is consistent with the remarkable use of air power during the Clinton administration as well as Obama’s embrace and expansion of the drone program. But those two anecdotes do not provide sufficient evidence to draw any reasonable conclusions. The same dynamic likely plays out across male (perceived as more hawkish) and female (perceived as more dovish) leaders from the same party.

@WilHMoo

It’s All Been Said Before

By Will H. Moore

I leave to the reader, as an exercise, completion of this list…

1929            All Quiet on the Western Front                      Erich Maria Remarque

1938            Johnny Got His Gun                                            Dalton Trumbo

1957            Paths of Glory                                                       Stanley Kubrick

1961             Catch 22                                                                   Joseph Heller

1967            “I-Feel-Like-I’m-Fixin’-To-Die Rag”             Country Joe and the Fish

1969             “Fortunate Son”                                                    Credence Clear Water Revival

1969             Slaughterhouse-Five                                          Kurt Vonnegut

1970            “Vietnam”                                                               Jimmy Cliff

1970            “War”                                                                        Edwin Starr

1971             “Imagine”                                                                John Lennon

1977            Born on the 4th of July                                     Ron Kovic

1978            Coming Home                                                       Hal Ashby

1979            Apocalypse Now                                                 Francis Ford Coppola

1980            Breaker Morant                                                    Bruce Beresford

1981            Gallipoli                                                                    Peter Weir

1981            White Man, Black War                                       Bruce Moore-King

1989            When Heaven and Earth Changed Places Le Ly Hayslip

@WilHMoo

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