Preventive military strike or preventive war? the fungibilty of power resources

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Publication Type Journal Article
School or College College of Humanities
Department Politics and International Studies
Creator Lobell, Steven E.
Title Preventive military strike or preventive war? the fungibilty of power resources
Date 2021
Description Differential rates of growth explanations for preventive war assume that power resources are highly fungible. That is, they assume that a state's power resources are easily and quickly ‘moveable' into practical military capability. This ‘unidimensional and undifferentiated' baseline obscures an important distinction in the motivations for preventive military strikes and preventive wars. To forestall or block an anticipated adverse power shift, under conditions of perceived low fungibility of power resources, leaders have strong motivation to launch a limited preventive military strike. High fungibility of power, in contrast, makes only preventive strikes-not all preventive action-less likely. Leaders have strong motivations to launch preventive wars, including all-out invasion and conquest, aimed at damaging and/or destroying many of the challenger's power assets, including non-threatening ones. In this article, I examine Israel's decision to use preventive military force, and specifically military strikes, to delay Iraq's (1981) and Syria's (2007) nuclear weapons programs.
Type Text
Publisher University of Utah
Subject Neoclassical realism; preventive war; preventive strikes; fungibility power; resources aggregate; power realism; osiraq israel syria
Language eng
Rights Management (c) Steven E. Lobell
Format Medium application/pdf
ARK ark:/87278/s61s44wg
Setname ir_uspace
ID 2470392
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s61s44wg
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