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Tools of Statecraft

Tools of Statecraft. Military intervention, foreign aid, and sanctions. I. Military Intervention. Predicting intervention Escalation: Joining an ongoing armed conflict Best predictor: Prior third-party intervention Alliance Portfolios predict side choice. What is an alliance portfolio?.

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Tools of Statecraft

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  1. Tools of Statecraft Military intervention, foreign aid, and sanctions

  2. I. Military Intervention • Predicting intervention • Escalation: Joining an ongoing armed conflict • Best predictor: Prior third-party intervention • Alliance Portfolios predict side choice

  3. What is an alliance portfolio? • All of the allies of a state • Similar portfolios generally reduce conflict / increase cooperation • Better predictor than dyadic alliance!

  4. I. Military Intervention • Predicting intervention • Escalation: Joining an ongoing armed conflict • Best predictor: Prior third-party intervention • Alliance portfolios predict side choice • More likely when existing parity between combatants

  5. Balances of Power: Disparity and Parity Disparity Parity

  6. I. Military Intervention • Predicting intervention • Escalation: Joining an ongoing armed conflict • Best predictor: Prior third-party intervention • Alliance portfolios predict side choice • More likely when existing parity between combatants • Great powers intervene much more frequently!

  7. 2. Predicting War Initiation • What factors increase the probability of war?

  8. a. Contiguity and Proximity Contiguity: Sharing common border MID = Use, threat, or display of force short of war

  9. Wealthy/Advanced State Poor State Proximity: Loss of Strength Gradient Resources that can be applied to a conflict decay at distance Shift in gradient due to technology or development

  10. b. Different Regime Types State level finding that magnifies dyadic effects: Democracies more stable than autocracies, which in turn are more stable than intermediate regimes

  11. c. Issue Type: Territory

  12. d. Power Parity: A “Balance of Power” Produces War, Not Peace! Disparity = Low Risk Parity = High Risk

  13. War initiators since 1980 • United States (Kosovo, Afghanistan, Iraq) • Iraq (1981 and 1990 attacks on Iran and Kuwait) • Israel (1982 and 2006 invasions of Lebanon) • Argentina (1982 occupation of Falklands) • Armenia (1991 war with Azerbaijan, depending on definition) • China (1987 attack on Vietnam) • Ecuador (1995 war with Peru) • Eritrea (1998 war with Ethiopia) • Georgia (2008 war with Russia) • Pakistan (1999 Kargil War with India) • Rwanda and perhaps Uganda (1998 war with the DRC) (Note: War is defined as minimum 1000 battle-deaths/year)

  14. B. When does intervention work? • Who wins interstate wars? • Who started it? Initiators win most wars quickly, but tend to lose long wars. • Bigger economy usually wins (GDP outperforms military predictors) • Bigger military also helps – parity makes victory less likely for both sides (stalemate)

  15. Parity Leads to Long Wars, Makes Stalemate More Likely

  16. 2. Intervention in Civil Wars

  17. 2. Intervention in Civil Wars • Does intervention lead to compromise?

  18. Probability of Compromise, 1816-1997 Intervention for government No intervention 2. Intervention in Civil Wars

  19. 2. Intervention in Civil Wars • Does intervention lead to compromise? Yes • Does intervention prolong wars?

  20. 2. Intervention in Civil Wars • Does intervention lead to compromise? Yes • Does intervention prolong wars? Yes • Is intervention getting more common?

  21. Intervention Over Time

  22. 2. Intervention in Civil Wars • Does intervention lead to compromise? Yes • Does intervention prolong wars? Yes • Is intervention getting more common? Yes • The intervenor’s dilemma: Saving lives vs. Justice • Want to end the war quickly? Help the strong crush the weak • Want to find a compromise? Write off another 10,000 people

  23. II. Sanctions and Pressure • Predicting Sanctions • US Sanctions: Best single predictor is target’s relationship with US • Domestic factors, target characteristics almost irrelevant • Interesting: Belligerence towards US after threat reduces chance that US imposes sanctions

  24. II. Sanctions and Pressure • Predicting Sanctions • US Sanctions: Best single predictor is target’s relationship with US • Domestic factors, target characteristics almost irrelevant • Interesting: Belligerence towards US after threat reduces chance that US imposes sanctions • General: Asymmetric dependence • If I depend on you, I am unlikely to sanction you • If you depend on me, I am more likely to sanction you • Problem: Measuring dependence is hard

  25. Example: US-South Africa • 1984: Asymmetric Interdependence? US = 15% of S.A. trade, but S.A. = only 1% of US trade • Issue: Apartheid • US backs South Africa, vetoes UN resolutions for sanctions • US imposes minor sanctions only (to forestall larger ones) • Question: Why not sanction?

  26. Example: US-South Africa • Answer: Minerals • USSR was obviously unreliable for strategic minerals

  27. Example: US-South Africa • US needed imports of critical minerals:

  28. F-100 Engine Use of Imported Metals(F-15 and F-16 aircraft – key to air defense in 1980s) Cobalt 910 lbs 73% (Norway, Finland) Tantalum 3 lbs 80% (China) Titanium 5,366 lbs 77% (Australia, South Africa) Columbium 171 lbs 100% (Brazil) Aluminum 720 lbs 100% (Australia) Chromium 1,656 lbs 80% (South Africa) Nickel 5,024 lbs 63% (Canada) (Note: Metals indicated are used in more than one place in engine)

  29. Example: US-South Africa • Best case: end trade = price increases • Worst case: end trade = inferior hardware

  30. Example: US-South Africa Did South Africa’s Minerals Make It Secure? • No: Fear of resource conflict  nuclear proliferation • 1957: US provides nuclear reactors, enriched uranium • 1970s: Insecurity in southern Africa = security-based rationale for atomic bomb (South Africa fears Soviet influence) • 1975-1976: US cuts off nuclear cooperation over NPT dispute; UK terminates bilateral defense treaty over apartheid • “laager mentality:” Fear of Soviet invasion, need to force Western defense, conventional arms embargoes, isolation  proliferation • 1977-1979: US-Soviet pressure fails to prevent probable nuclear test (possibly joint Israeli-South African test) • 1980s: Six atomic bombs constructed • 1990: White government dismantles arsenal before majority rule

  31. B. Do sanctions work? • The basic problem: The “best” sanctions are never imposed • Keys to success • Sanction must be large % of target’s GDP • Sanction must not harm sender (very much) • Problem: Trade is mutually beneficial. Cutoff will always harm sender • Success usually takes less than 5 years

  32. III. Foreign Aid • Predicting foreign aid • In general (who gets the most aid?) • Free market countries (especially during Cold War) • Post-Colonial states (especially during decolonization) • Poverty and Debt • Specific relationships • US: Egypt, Israel, Iraq (since 2003) • Japan: “Friends of Japan” – similar UN voting and trade • Western Europe: Former colonies

  33. B. US Gives Low % of GDP for development…

  34. …but still manages to be the largest donor

  35. 1. Recent International Affairs spending (aid and diplomacy): Surprising stability

  36. 2. Long-Term Decline in Foreign Aid

  37. 3. Top Three Recipients of US Aid: FY 2001 – FY 2009 (And 2010 Request) Israel and Egypt were the top two from 1979 to 2002 and in the top five ever since 9/11 (along with Iraq, Afghanistan, and Pakistan – countries where US forces have been fighting). Why?

  38. C. Does foreign aid work? • Aid and corruption: No overall correlation, positive or negative • More corrupt countries tend to attract US aid • Less corrupt countries tend to attract aid from Australia and Scandinavia • Aid and growth • “Good policies:” Aid may have positive effect • “Bad policies:” Aid has no effect • Problem: Hard to establish effect of aid on growth. Why?

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