Theorizing cyber coercion: The 2014 North Korean operation against Sony |
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Authors: | Travis Sharp |
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Affiliation: | Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, USA |
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Abstract: | This article challenges the conventional wisdom that cyber operations have limited coercive value. It theorizes that cyber operations contribute to coercion by imposing costs and destabilizing an opponent’s leadership. As costs mount and destabilization spreads, the expected utility of capitulation surpasses that of continued defiance, leading the opponent’s leaders to comply with the coercer’s demands. The article applies this ‘cost-destabilization’ model to the 2014 North Korean cyber operation against Sony. Through cost imposition and leadership destabilization, the North Korean operation, despite its lack of physical destructiveness, caused Sony to make a series of costly decisions to avoid future harm. |
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Keywords: | Cybersecurity coercion North Korea Sony |
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