Unreliable Allies? Democratic Reliability and Coalition Warfare in Iraq

Patrick A. Mello
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Abstract

When do democracies become ‘unreliable’ alliance partners? Existing studies make conflicting claims about the alliance behavior of democracies. Some argue that democratic leaders are hardly constrained by domestic considerations in their decision-making, even when the public is largely opposed to a military commitment. Others contest that domestic politics does matter and, specifically, that election cycles influence decisions on whether to withdraw from an operation or to participate in the first place. This paper puts these arguments to an empirical test, investigating alliance dynamics for 29 democracies that participated in the ad hoc coalition for Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF) between 2003 and 2010. Employing fuzzy-set Qualitative Comparative Analysis (fsQCA), the paper takes a set-theoretic approach that emphasizes the combination and interaction of the preconditions of coalition withdrawal. This complements and goes beyond existing studies that have been mainly formal and statistical work. The paper specifically focuses on the election cycle, government turnover, and partisanship as conditions that potentially cause withdrawal decisions.
不可靠的盟友吗?伊拉克的民主可靠性和联合战争
民主国家什么时候会成为“不可靠的”联盟伙伴?现有的研究对民主国家的联盟行为提出了相互矛盾的主张。一些人认为,民主国家的领导人在决策时几乎不会受到国内因素的限制,即使公众在很大程度上反对军事承诺。另一些人则认为,国内政治确实很重要,特别是选举周期会影响决定是退出行动还是首先参与行动。本文对这些观点进行了实证检验,调查了2003年至2010年间参加伊拉克自由行动(OIF)特别联盟的29个民主国家的联盟动态。本文采用模糊集定性比较分析(fsQCA)方法,采用集合论的方法,强调联合撤退前提条件的组合和相互作用。这补充并超越了主要是正式和统计工作的现有研究。这篇论文特别关注了选举周期、政府更替和党派关系作为可能导致撤军决定的条件。
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