Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:395Hits:19927109Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID096285
Title ProperStaying the course
Other Title Informationpresidential leadership, military stalemate, and strategic inertia
LanguageENG
AuthorPolsky, Andrew J
Publication2010.
Summary / Abstract (Note)Military stalemate in Iraq and Vietnam presents a puzzle: why do presidents persist in a strategic course that has failed to secure the goals they defined when they chose to embark upon war? In the face of a quagmire, presidents might choose among three broad strategic options-disengagement, escalation, or continuity. I argue that the first alternative, to withdraw, is made impossible by the inflated rhetoric presidents invoke to sell a skeptical public on the necessity for a limited war and by their own conviction (reinforced by core supporters) that the price of defeat is too great. At the opposite pole lies the possibility of full-scale mobilization. But because presidents during the Vietnam and Iraq wars believed they could also pursue expensive domestic agendas, they did not reserve the resources needed for large-scale escalation. In the both cases, too, civilian leaders were deeply skeptical about their military counterparts and discounted their caution that a greater military commitment would be needed. Finally, as wars drag on, public disenchantment prevents presidents from mustering the political support escalation would require. Their early decisions thus leave them with no alternative to their current strategic commitment.
`In' analytical NotePerspectives on Politics Vol. 8, No. 1; Mar 2010: p.127-139
Journal SourcePerspectives on Politics Vol. 8, No. 1; Mar 2010: p.127-139
Key WordsPresidential Leadership ;  Military Stalemate ;  Strategic Inertia ;  Iraq ;  Vietnam ;  Escalation ;  Military