Chapter 8 - Tech, the use of force and WMD Flashcards

1
Q

Which 4 factors go into the use of hard power?

A

1) Military Capabilities
2) Willingness to use capabilities (internal)
3) Credibility/trust (external)
4) Strategy (preparedness)

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2
Q

What is soft power? (2)

A

1) ability to shape preferences of other through appeal and attraction (Nye)
2) more effective if coupled with hard power

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3
Q

What is hard power? (2)

A

1) use or threat of force to affect behaviour

2) incl. economic warfare (santions, boycott, embargoes(

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4
Q

What is smart power?

A

Focus on smart power, but also alliances, partnership and institutiosn to expand influence and legitimacy of actions (CSIS)

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5
Q

What is social power? (2)

A

1) Constructivist undertones

2) Ability to set norms and rules influencing the actions of others

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6
Q

What is the Offence-Defence Balance Theory?

A

The way tech innovations fall on either offence/defence side determines whether conflict/peace

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7
Q

How many states are in the nuclear club?

A

10

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8
Q

How has the purpose of weapons changed? (2)

A

1) before: to defeat enemies during wars

2) after nuclear era: to avert wars (Brodie)

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9
Q

What is Second-Strike Capability?

A

Ability to inflict unacceptable damage on an adversary after being struck first

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10
Q

What is First-strike Capability?

A

Ability to negate the other’s second-strike capability

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11
Q

What do MAD proponents argue? (3)

A

1) Worst scenario is 2 states both believing first-strike capability
2) MAD ensures mutual fear
3) States should protect their weapons rather than populations

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12
Q

What do NUTS argue? (3)

A

1) Nuclear Utilization Theorists (Keeny)
2) States should seek first-strike capability (to take account of different attack magnitudes)
3) MAD is impractical and immoral

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13
Q

What are 2 a criticisms of NUTS?

A

1) a defence system can never be guaranteed succesful (Jervis)
2) Nuclear weapons pose too large a risk

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14
Q

How are nuclear power plants related to weapons? (2)

A

1) A by-product is plutonium which may be reprocessed and used in nuclear weapons
2) INDI, ISR, PAK and Iraq started programmes like this

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15
Q

What are 3 Reasons states want nuclear weapons?

A

1) Conflicts with neighbouring states or geopolitical rivals
2) Prestige
3) Nuclear weapons as equalizers (state survival)

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16
Q

Why capable states do not want nuclear weapons? (2)

A

1) Extended Deterrence

2) Approval and Material benefits from other states

17
Q

What is Liberalism’s take on future of nuclear weapons?

A

IL and IOs can overcome mistrust and facilitate non-proliferation

18
Q

What is Constructivism’s take on future of nuclear weapons?

A

State power/identity still linked to nuclear weapons, but narrative could change (e.g. EU as great non-nuclear power)

19
Q

Do nuclear weapons provide foreign policy benefits? (3)

A

1) Yes: nuclear states more likely to prevail in conflicts (Asal)
2) No: nuclear weapons do not increase proability of success (Sechser)
3) Middle: nuclear waepons ensure deterrence but are not useful for compelling others (Sechser)

20
Q

How does Constructivism explain why states do not get nuclear weapons? (2)

A

1) nuclear taboo

2) S.AFR and UKR had weapons but gave them up to conform

21
Q

How does Liberalism explain why states do not get nuclear weapons? (2)

A

1) IOs’ monitoring deter states

2) UN rewards states willing to give up nuclear weapons with civilian nuclear tech

22
Q

How does Realism explain why states do not get nuclear weapons? (2)

A

1) states rely on extended deterrence (falling under nuclear umbrella)
2) EX: JAP believes US will protect

23
Q

Does nuclear proliferation stabilize or destabilize? (2)

A

1) Waltz: stabilize bc deterrence and nuclear weapons will create caution and responsibility
2) Sagan: destabilize bc of spontaneous autocrats, single-strike capabilities, and risks of accidents

24
Q

What did the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (1968) do? (2)

A

1) Non-nuclear signatories: renounce weapons and receive tech and info on power plants + monitoring
2) nuclear signatories: commit to disarmament and transfer civilian nuclear tech

25
Q

4 Means of Halting Nuclear Proliferation

A

1) Nunn-Lugar Program (US: pay to destroy WMD and retrain USSR scientists
2) Export Controls
3) Preemptive Military actions
4) US Extraterritorial legislation

26
Q

Why would nuclear deterrence be less effective against terrorist organizations? (1)

A

They have no “return address”