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TROOP DEPLOYMENT (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   117623


Effect of US troop deployment on host states foreign policy / Machain, Carla Martinez; Morgan, T Clifton   Journal Article
Morgan, T Clifton Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract Major powers often deploy troops abroad with the consent of host states. The stated aim of these deployments is often both to protect the host state and to foster stability in the region. Drawing from an extension of Palmer and Morgan's two-good theory of foreign policy, the authors explore some of the (perhaps unintended) effects of troop deployments abroad on the foreign policies of the host states. In particular, the authors focus on the effects of US deployments. The authors argue that as the number of US troops deployed to a host state increases, we should expect the host state to reduce its own troop levels, be more likely to initiate militarized interstate disputes, and be less likely to be the target of interstate disputes. The authors test these hypotheses using data on US troop deployments abroad from 1950 to 2005 and discuss implications that their findings may have for US foreign policy.
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2
ID:   170282


Supplying UN Peacekeepers: an Assessment of the Body Bag Syndrome among OECD Nations / Raes, Steffi   Journal Article
Raes, Steffi Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract The body bag syndrome is often described as a casualty aversion that decreases public support of participation in military missions. As policymakers believe in the body bag syndrome, they may adapt their foreign policy accordingly, leading to reduced willingness to supply personnel. This article seeks empirical evidence for the existence of the body bag syndrome, or the influence of casualties on the decision to remain engaged in a UN peacekeeping mission (PKO). A dataset containing all UN peacekeeping missions of OECD countries is set up for a period of 1996 to 2014, specifically focussing on decisions during ongoing missions. To capture the body bag syndrome, the casualties a country incurs during the previous year are included into an existing model for the supply of peacekeepers. The results show no evidence on the body bag syndrome for both the level of total casualties and casualties due to malicious acts, but casualties due to illnesses cause a reduction in personnel supplied to the mission. Other determinants which explain why countries remain engaged in a mission are mostly related to the conflict or the mission.
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