ID | 192534 |
Title Proper | Deterrence by delivery of arms |
Other Title Information | NATO and the war in Ukraine |
Language | ENG |
Author | Lupovici, Amir |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | During the course of the war in Ukraine, various actors have employed a unique type of deterrence by denial: namely, the threat to deliver arms. NATO leaders have committed—through rhetoric and deeds—to continue to deliver weapons to Ukraine if Russia escalated the war in order to deny Russian success. Not only is this type of strategy undertheorized, but it also challenges the distinction between direct and extended deterrence that has been central to deterrence scholarship. In deterrence by delivery of arms, the patron deters not by threatening to fight or deploy forces, but by committing to send weapons. However, the strategy also requires the protégé’s ability to fight. Studying deterrence by delivery of arms opens up understudied areas of deterrence (by denial), and provides a useful opportunity to consider how prominent concepts contribute to the research but also at times limit it. |
`In' analytical Note | Contemporary Security Policy Vol. 44, No.4; Oct 2023: p.624-641 |
Journal Source | Contemporary Security Policy Vol: 44 No 4 |
Key Words | NATO ; Russia ; Extended Deterrence ; The War in Ukraine ; Deterrence by denial |