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ID097369
Title ProperDamned if you do, damned if you don't
Other Title Informationperformative power and the strategy of conventional and nuclear defusing
LanguageENG
AuthorAdler, Emanuel
Publication2010.
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article seeks to initiate a new round of strategic intellectual innovation in an era when threats posed by non-state terrorist organizations and their state supporters do not resemble Cold War threats. Based on an interpretative sociological reading of the concepts of power, security, and rationality, it argues that a "damned if you do, damned if you don't" dilemma is to the post-Cold War era what the danger of surprise attack or unintended nuclear war was to the Cold War: the defining structural threat of international politics. The dilemma leaves states confronting asymmetrical warfare with the choice of reacting with force to a terrorist act or practicing appeasement. Neither approach, however, can achieve the goal of putting an end to terrorism. Deterrence sustains the dilemma by providing a rationale for why force should be used and why self-restraint is irrational. This article proposes a third option, defusing, which may be accomplished by denial (preventing provocateurs from dragging states into the use of force) and restructuration (transforming the structure and rules of the situation). Defusing relies on "performative power"-the capacity to project a dramatic and credible performance on the world stage and to decouple social actors, their audiences, and their most deeply held strategic beliefs. The force of the argument is illustrated by examples from the global "war on terror," the 2006 Lebanon War, the 2008-09 operation "Cast Lead" in Gaza, and the Iranian nuclear crisis.
`In' analytical NoteSecurity Studies Vol. 19, No. 2; Apr-Jun 2010: p.199 - 229
Journal SourceSecurity Studies Vol. 19, No. 2; Apr-Jun 2010: p.199 - 229
Key WordsIntellectual Innovation ;  Non - State Terrorist Organizations ;  Cold War ;  Security ;  Nuclear War ;  Asymmetrical Warfare ;  Gaza


 
 
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