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Military Threats: The Costs of Coercion and the Price of Peace

Military Threats: The Costs of Coercion and the Price of Peace

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Branislav L. Slantchev
Cambridge University Press
Edition: Illustrated, 2/3/2011
EAN 9780521763189, ISBN10: 0521763185

Hardcover, 328 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 2.8 cm
Language: English
Originally published in English

Is military power central in determining which states get their voice heard? Must states run a high risk of war to communicate credible intent? In this book, Slantchev shows that states can often obtain concessions without incurring higher risks when they use military threats. Unlike diplomatic forms of communication, physical military moves improve a state's expected performance in war. If the opponent believes the threat, it will be more likely to back down. Military moves are also inherently costly, so only resolved states are willing to pay these costs. Slantchev argues that powerful states can secure better peaceful outcomes and lower the risk of war, but the likelihood of war depends on the extent to which a state is prepared to use military threats to deter challenges to peace and compel concessions without fighting. The price of peace may therefore be large: states invest in military forces that are both costly and unused.

Part I. Coercion and Credibility
1. Introduction
2. Commitment and signalling in coercive bargaining
Part II. A Theory of Military Threats
3. A model of military threats
4. Comparing the instruments of coercion
Part III. Elements of Militarized Deterrence
5. Militarization and the distribution of power and interests
6. The expansion of the Korean War, 1950
7. The price of peace and military threat effectiveness
Part IV. Conclusions
8. Implications
Appendix A. Formalities for Chapter 2
Appendix B. Formalities for Chapter 3
Appendix C. Formalities for Chapter 4
Appendix D. Formalities for Chapter 5.

'This book is an impressive display of intellectual firepower. It will be required reading for anyone interested in crisis bargaining or deterrence.' R. Harrison Wagner, University of Texas, Austin