Conditional Assistance: Entrapment Concerns and Individual-Level Support for US Alliance Partners

IF 1.7 Q2 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Florian Justwan, Jeffrey D Berejikian
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract In this paper, we explore how concerns about entrapment influence mass attitudes about armed support for an alliance partner. We focus on two separate dimensions of entrapment: allied crisis instigation and the risk of direct entanglement in a nuclear conflict. Our empirical analysis is based on US experimental survey data, collected in 2021. Our data analysis reveals two main findings. First, people are less likely to endorse military action in support of another country if that state is perceived as the instigator of a given military crisis. However, we find that allied crisis instigation only reduces individual-level support for certain types of military operations (cruise missile and nuclear strikes) but not others. Furthermore, even where significant, the substantive effect of our experimental vignette is fairly limited. This implies that US voters are not particularly sensitive to the potential for offensive entrapment in the US–South Korean alliance. Second, we find that nuclear deterrence threats from international rivals sap public support for military action. However, this is only true (1) for conventional military attacks and (2) if the US President does not provide a substantive justification for military intervention. As soon as leaders offer a detailed rationale for military action, the negative effect of foreign nuclear threats on support for the use of force disappears.
有条件援助:对美国联盟伙伴的陷阱问题和个人层面的支持
在本文中,我们探讨了对陷阱的担忧如何影响大众对联盟伙伴武装支持的态度。我们着重于诱捕的两个不同方面:联合危机煽动和直接卷入核冲突的风险。我们的实证分析基于2021年收集的美国实验调查数据。我们的数据分析揭示了两个主要发现。首先,如果一个国家被认为是某个军事危机的煽动者,人们就不太可能支持支持这个国家的军事行动。然而,我们发现,联合危机煽动只会减少对某些类型军事行动(巡航导弹和核打击)的个人层面的支持,而不会减少其他类型的军事行动。此外,即使在重要的地方,我们的实验小插曲的实质性影响是相当有限的。这意味着,美国选民对美韩同盟中可能出现的攻击性陷阱并不特别敏感。其次,我们发现来自国际竞争对手的核威慑威胁削弱了公众对军事行动的支持。然而,这只有在(1)常规军事攻击和(2)美国总统没有为军事干预提供实质性理由的情况下才成立。一旦领导人提供军事行动的详细理由,外国核威胁对支持使用武力的负面影响就会消失。
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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来源期刊
Journal of Global Security Studies
Journal of Global Security Studies INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS-
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
6.20%
发文量
34
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