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Assessing Competing Defense Postures: The Strategic Implications of “Flexible Response”

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 June 2011

Frank C. Zagare
Affiliation:
State University of New York
D. Marc Kilgour
Affiliation:
Wilfrid Laurier University
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Abstract

A two-stage Asymmetric Escalation Game is developed to explore the connection between stage credibility and deterrence stability. There are two players in the model: Challenger and Defender. Challenger may initiate or not. If Challenger initiates, Defender may do nothing, respond in kind, or escalate; Challenger may then escalate or counterescalate, and so on. Each player is uncertain about the other's intentions at the final stage of the game. Escalation represents a choice that both players believe is qualitatively different from other available responses. Thus the model applies to any situation in which Defender may respond by crossing a threshold, thereby inducing a (psychologically) distinct level of conflict.

The Perfect Bayesian Equilibria are identified and interpreted, and inferences are drawn about the viability of limited war options and various competing flexible response deployment policies. In general, the model reveals that substrategic deployments add little to overall deterrence stability. Under certain relatively rare conditions, a policy called no-first-use in the super power context offers Defender advantages that might conceivably warrant the deployment stance associated with it. But a war fighting deployment never benefits Defender. Within the confines of the model, therefore, limited or substrategic wars are possible but unlikely.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Trustees of Princeton University 1995

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References

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7 As R. Harrison Wagner (personal communication, April 24, 1992) points out, we assume that the payoffs at outcome EE are the same, regardless of which player escalates first. We accept the point that players in the real world are likely to prefer escalating first. We make this assumption to gain mathematical tractability. Note its implications: Defender's expected payoffs at Node 2 when it chooses E are underrepresented (because it likely prefers the mutual escalation outcome associated with this choice to the mutual escalation outcome associated with the choice of D); it follows that its expected payoff from choosing (D) at Node 2 is overrepresented. The bias of the model, therefore, is toward overreporting the likelihood of a (Limited-Response) equilibrium that involves the possibility that Defender responds in kind to a challange. As we show below, however, even with this bias, the conditions under which such an equilibrium exists are quite restricted.

8 In other words, we assume the choice of D is commensurate with Challenger's initiation at Node 1. Thus, at Node 2, Defender may defect by matching in scope and intensity the actions taken by Challenger to contest the status quo, or it may choose unconstrained actions, such as those associated with waging an all-out war, represented by the escalation alternative (E).

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35 Zagare and Kilgour (fn. 5).

26 As detailed in the appendix, some restrictions on r (i.e., Defender's conditional probability that Challenger is seen to be Hard, given that Challenger initiates) also apply under any No-Limited-Response Equilibrium.

27 For a discussion of the impact of specific changes in utilities on the relative locations of the threshold values defining the existence regions of all three forms of NLRE (i.e., d1, d2, and c1), see Zagare and Kilgour (fn. 5).

28 Daalder (fn. 3), 58.

29 Ibid., 46.

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31 Zagare and Kilgour (fn. 5).

32 Ibid.

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