Public Warnings in Counterterrorism Operations: Managing the 'Cry-Wolf' Effect when Facing a Strategic Adversary

Nitin Bakshi, Edieal J. Pinker
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Abstract

Public warnings have the potential to be a powerful tool to mitigate the threat from terrorism: the public is alerted, and in response, the terrorist may defer or deflect his attack. Paradoxically, warnings can be a victim of their own success. The absence of an attack may be misconstrued by the warning recipients as a false alarm, leading to warning fatigue and a dampened response to future warnings -- also referred to as the "cry-wolf" effect. To capture this phenomenon, we model the interaction between the defender and the terrorist using a dynamic game-theoretic framework. We find that a more effective warning shifts emphasis from the direct benefit of mitigating losses from an attack, to the indirect benefit of inducing the terrorist to defer his attack to a later time. We examine the implications of this finding in the context of defending a single location, and two locations. For instance, we find that the frequent occurrence of false alarms does not necessarily imply political gamesmanship; an increase in the terrorist's readiness can result in a lower frequency of terrorist attacks; issuing a joint warning across two locations can be optimal even when the asymmetry in their vulnerability is high. Our results clarify conventional wisdom, and hence, have important policy implications.
反恐行动中的公共警告:面对战略对手时管理“狼来了”效应
公众警告有可能成为减轻恐怖主义威胁的有力工具:公众得到警告,作为回应,恐怖分子可能推迟或转移他的袭击。矛盾的是,警告可能成为其自身成功的牺牲品。没有攻击可能会被警告接受者误解为假警报,导致警告疲劳和对未来警告的反应减弱——也被称为“狼叫”效应。为了捕捉这一现象,我们使用动态博弈论框架来模拟防御者和恐怖分子之间的互动。我们发现,更有效的警告将重点从减轻袭击损失的直接利益转移到诱导恐怖分子推迟袭击的间接利益上。我们研究这一发现的含义在捍卫一个单一的位置和两个位置的背景下。例如,我们发现假警报的频繁发生并不一定意味着政治游戏;恐怖分子准备程度的提高可以降低恐怖袭击的频率;即使在两个地点的脆弱性高度不对称的情况下,发出联合警告也是最佳的。我们的研究结果澄清了传统观点,因此具有重要的政策意义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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