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When Are Power Shifts Dangerous?: Military Strategy and Preventive War

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Authors

Lee, Dong Sun

Issue Date
2006-12
Publisher
Institute of International Affairs, Graduate School of International Studies, Seoul National University
Citation
Journal of International and Area Studies, Vol.13 No.2, pp. 53-71
Keywords
Power ShiftPreventive WarMilitary StrategyOffense-Defense BalanceMilitary PowerPower Transition
Abstract
This article explains why shifts in the balance of power lead to war in some cases, but not in others. I argue that the declining states military strategy is the key determinant of whether power shifts will result in war or pass peacefully. If the decliner has a maneuver strategy, then war is likely; if it has an attrition strategy, the power shift will pass peacefully. I test the plausibility of my theory and three prominent alternatives by taking a sample of twelve power shifts among great powers over the period 1860-1945 and establishing correlations between the indicators used by all four theories and the incidence in each case of war or peace. This article finds that for the large majority of the examined cases, the decliners military strategy correctly predicts the power shifts political outcome
ISSN
1226-8550
Language
English
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/96441
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