War Study Guide
Study Guide
📖 Core Concepts
War – Armed conflict between state armed forces or between a state and organized armed groups; marked by widespread violence, destruction, and mortality.
Total War – No limitation to legitimate military targets; civilian populations suffer massive casualties.
War Aims – Desired territorial, economic, military, or prestige outcomes; can be tangible (land, resources) or intangible (credibility, prestige).
Levels of Explanation –
System‑level (realist security dilemma, balance‑of‑power, power‑transition, liberal trade).
Societal‑level (diversionary theory, in‑group/out‑group dynamics, rally effect).
Individual‑level (bounded rationality, cognitive biases, prospect‑theory loss aversion).
Just War Theory – Moral checklist for jus ad bellum (authority, just cause, right intent, probability of success, last resort, proportionality) and jus in bello (proportionality, discrimination).
Ceasefire vs. Armistice – Ceasefire = temporary suspension; armistice = formal end to hostilities.
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📌 Must Remember
WWII death toll: 70–85 million total; 40 million civilian deaths.
Post‑1945 trends: Decline in great‑power wars & formal declarations; rise in civil wars.
Types of warfare: Asymmetric, conventional, nuclear, chemical, biological, cyber, information, unconventional, cold, total.
Rationalist causes of war (Fearon 1995):
Issue indivisibility – a good cannot be split.
Information asymmetry – states misjudge each other’s capabilities or resolve.
Commitment problems – lack of credible guarantees.
Just war criteria: Authority, just cause, right intent, success probability, last resort, proportionality (ad bellum); proportionality, discrimination (in bello).
Security dilemma: Defensive vs. offensive actions are ambiguous → escalation.
Youth‑bulge effect: Large cohorts of young males raise civil‑war risk.
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🔄 Key Processes
War‑Decision Checklist (Jus ad Bellum)
Verify lawful authority → assess just cause → confirm right intent → estimate probability of success → ensure no viable alternatives (last resort) → evaluate proportionality of expected outcomes.
Rationalist Bargaining Model
Each side forms a utility function (gain – cost).
Exchange offers → update beliefs (reduce information asymmetry).
If offers intersect → peace; if not → war (often due to commitment problems).
Ceasefire Implementation
Step 1: Agree on scope & duration.
Step 2: Set up third‑party monitoring (e.g., UN observers).
Step 3: Establish communication hotlines & verification mechanisms.
Step 4: Define demilitarized zones or troop withdrawals.
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🔍 Key Comparisons
Asymmetric vs. Conventional Warfare
Asymmetric: Disparate capabilities; often guerrilla tactics, low‑tech weapons.
Conventional: Comparable forces; uses standard military hardware, no WMD.
Total War vs. Conventional War
Total: No distinction between combatants & civilians; entire economy mobilized.
Conventional: Targets limited to military assets; civilian protection required.
Explicit vs. Implicit War Aims
Explicit: Stated in public policy or declarations.
Implicit: Hidden in internal memos, not publicly disclosed.
Ceasefire vs. Armistice
Ceasefire: Temporary pause, may be indefinite, often humanitarian.
Armistice: Formal, legally binding end to hostilities.
Rationalist vs. Cultural Theories
Rationalist: Emphasizes strategic calculations, information & commitment.
Cultural: Highlights identity, status‑seeking, and historical norms.
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⚠️ Common Misunderstandings
“All wars are declared.” → Many modern conflicts (e.g., proxy wars, cyber attacks) lack formal declarations.
“Trade always prevents war.” → High interdependence can increase tension; the peace‑trade link is mixed.
“Total war = nuclear war.” → Total war can be conventional (e.g., WWII) or involve WMDs; nuclear war is a subset.
“Ceasefires guarantee peace.” → They can be exploited for re‑arming or surprise attacks.
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🧠 Mental Models / Intuition
War as a Prisoner’s Dilemma: Security dilemma → each side’s defensive move looks offensive → mutual escalation.
Bargaining Gap: Visualize the “pie” of possible settlement; war occurs when the gap between each side’s expected share and acceptable share is too large.
Loss‑Aversion Lens: Leaders over‑weight potential losses → may choose war to avoid perceived humiliation.
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🚩 Exceptions & Edge Cases
Trade Dependency: In some cases, high trade makes states more vulnerable to economic coercion, sparking conflict.
Information Asymmetry: Even with modern intelligence, strategic surprise (e.g., Pearl Harbor) shows asymmetry persists.
Youth Bulge: Not every society with a youth bulge experiences civil war; institutional factors moderate the effect.
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📍 When to Use Which
Choosing a level of analysis:
System‑level → explain wars between great powers (balance‑of‑power, power‑transition).
Societal‑level → interpret internal unrest or diversionary wars.
Individual‑level → assess leader bias, misperception, or decision‑making errors.
Selecting a war‑type label:
Use asymmetric when capability gap > 10× and tactics include guerrilla/terrorism.
Use conventional when both sides field comparable regular forces and avoid WMDs.
Applying Just War criteria:
Run the six jus ad bellum tests first; if any fail, the war is illegitimate regardless of jus in bello compliance.
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👀 Patterns to Recognize
“Rally Effect” spikes in public support at war onset → often followed by later disillusionment.
Youth‑bulge + low‑income → higher likelihood of civil conflict.
Repeated “commitment problem” language (e.g., “no enforceable treaty”) → red flag for potential war.
Ceasefire language that omits verification → higher chance of breakdown.
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🗂️ Exam Traps
Distractor: “Economic competition is the sole cause of war.” → Wrong; multiple theories coexist (realist, cultural, demographic).
Trap: “All asymmetric wars involve guerrilla tactics.” → Incorrect; some are high‑tech cyber or information attacks.
Misleading choice: “A ceasefire is legally binding like an armistice.” → False; ceasefires are often informal and can be broken.
Near‑miss answer: “The security dilemma always leads to war.” → Over‑states; diplomatic signaling can mitigate escalation.
Confusing statement: “Just war theory only concerns jus ad bellum.” → Wrong; jus in bello (proportionality, discrimination) is equally essential.
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