Arbiters of Social Unrest: Military Responses to the Arab Spring

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Authors

Parsons, William
Taylor, William

Issue Date

2011

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Other

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en_US

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Abstract

What explains the variance in military behavior during popular uprisings in Northern Africa and the Middle East? Contrary to models which tout the internal characteristics of the military, the external political, social and economic conditions, the influence of Western economic and military assistance or the transformative experience of educating officers in Western schools, it is argued that it is instead a matter of the political restraints and interests of the military which determines the likelihood of military intervention in the political domain. Higher levels of restraints on the military will result in more reactive and slower decision making, and a lower propensity to intervene. Higher levels of interests will result in a higher likelihood of military intervention.

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Strategic Paper

Citation

Military Academy West Point Ny, William Parsons, and William Taylor. 2011. “Arbiters of Social Unrest: Military Responses to the Arab Spring.” DTIC, January. https://research-ebsco-com.usafa.idm.oclc.org/linkprocessor/plink?id=116dc752-8c8d-3788-bfa4-893827e66a32.

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DTIC

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