The continuing resonance of the war as risk management perspective for understanding military interventions |
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Authors: | Yee-Kuang Heng |
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Affiliation: | Graduate School of Public Policy, The University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan |
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Abstract: | In the late 1990s and 2000s, a slew of books and journal articles proposed that a nexus between risk management and warfare was emerging. This article argues that risk management ideas continue to shape recent campaigns against Libya, Islamic State, Syria, and the war on terror from Niger, Yemen to Somalia. It uses existing literature on risk and warfare to examine four key aspects of contemporary interventions. First, the article evaluates the overall strategic context as security concerns shift from terrorism toward renewed great power competition. Second, it re-assesses the risk calculus for military action through the language and grammar of risk invoked by politicians. Third and fourth, it addresses the continuing reliance on air power and the managerial ethos of military operations as important features of war as risk management. |
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Keywords: | Risk management transformation of warfare risk calculus |
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