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The threat to use military force is a matter that commands
immediate attention from many segments of government. Karsten,
Howell, and Allen systematically analyze statistically significant
numbers of actual cases to discover the determinants of success or
failure of the threat to employ military force. After describing
their methodology, they address several questions: what are the
general characteristics of the typical threat? what types of
threats succeed? what threats lead to war? did threats in the
prenuclear past differ in outcome from those in the nuclear
present? have the United States' threats differed substantially
from those of other nations? can anything be said concerning the
long-term consequences of the threats? In a concluding chapter the
authors summarize their findings, compare them to the conventional
wisdom, and then, as a test, apply them to six historical cases.
They end their study with a look at the Solidarity and Falklands
crises, and a theoretical scenario that suggests the significance
of their findings.
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