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- Coercive_diplomacy abstract "Coercive diplomacy or \"forceful persuasion\" is the \"attempt to get a target, a state, a group (or groups) within a state, or a nonstate actor-to change its objectionable behavior through either the threat to use force or the actual use of limited force.\" This term also refers to \"diplomacy presupposing the use or threatened use of military force to achieve political objectives.\" Coercive diplomacy \"is essentially a diplomatic strategy, one that relies on the threat of force rather than the use of force. If force must be used to strengthen diplomatic efforts at persuasion, it is employed in an exemplary manner, in the form of quite limited military action, to demonstrate resolution and willingness to escalate to high levels of military action if necessary.\"Coercive diplomacy can be more clearly described as \"a political-diplomatic strategy that aims to influence an adversary’s will or incentive structure. It is a strategy that combines threats of force, and, if necessary, the limited and selective use of force in discrete and controlled increments, in a bargaining strategy that includes positive inducements. The aim is to induce an adversary to comply with one's demands, or to negotiate the most favorable compromise possible, while simultaneously managing the crisis to prevent unwanted military escalation.\"As distinguished from deterrence theory, which is a strategy aimed at adversaries to dissuade them from undertaking an action not yet started, coercive diplomacy entails efforts to persuade an opponent to stop or reverse an action. Its central task is \"to create in the opponent the expectation of costs of sufficient magnitude to erode his motivation to continue what he is doing.\" Coercive diplomacy attempts to have force be a much more \"flexible, refined psychological instrument of policy in contrast to the 'quick, decisive' military strategy, which uses force as a blunt instrument.\"".
- Coercive_diplomacy wikiPageID "8486300".
- Coercive_diplomacy wikiPageLength "15339".
- Coercive_diplomacy wikiPageOutDegree "28".
- Coercive_diplomacy wikiPageRevisionID "693546746".
- Coercive_diplomacy wikiPageWikiLink Alexander_L._George.
- Coercive_diplomacy wikiPageWikiLink Blockade.
- Coercive_diplomacy wikiPageWikiLink Category:Monetary_hegemony.
- Coercive_diplomacy wikiPageWikiLink Category:Types_of_diplomacy.
- Coercive_diplomacy wikiPageWikiLink Coercion.
- Coercive_diplomacy wikiPageWikiLink Cuba.
- Coercive_diplomacy wikiPageWikiLink Cuban_Missile_Crisis.
- Coercive_diplomacy wikiPageWikiLink Daniel_Byman.
- Coercive_diplomacy wikiPageWikiLink Deterrence_theory.
- Coercive_diplomacy wikiPageWikiLink Foreign_policy.
- Coercive_diplomacy wikiPageWikiLink George_H._W._Bush.
- Coercive_diplomacy wikiPageWikiLink Gulf_War.
- Coercive_diplomacy wikiPageWikiLink Intermediate-range_ballistic_missile.
- Coercive_diplomacy wikiPageWikiLink Iraq.
- Coercive_diplomacy wikiPageWikiLink John_F._Kennedy.
- Coercive_diplomacy wikiPageWikiLink Joseph_Nye.
- Coercive_diplomacy wikiPageWikiLink Kuwait.
- Coercive_diplomacy wikiPageWikiLink Matthew_Waxman.
- Coercive_diplomacy wikiPageWikiLink Medium-range_ballistic_missile.
- Coercive_diplomacy wikiPageWikiLink Nikita_Khrushchev.
- Coercive_diplomacy wikiPageWikiLink PGM-19_Jupiter.
- Coercive_diplomacy wikiPageWikiLink Political_psychology.
- Coercive_diplomacy wikiPageWikiLink Saddam_Hussein.
- Coercive_diplomacy wikiPageWikiLink Saudi_Arabia.
- Coercive_diplomacy wikiPageWikiLink Stanford_University.
- Coercive_diplomacy wikiPageWikiLink Thomas_Schelling.
- Coercive_diplomacy wikiPageWikiLink Ultimatum.
- Coercive_diplomacy wikiPageWikiLink United_Nations_Security_Council.
- Coercive_diplomacy wikiPageWikiLinkText "Coercive diplomacy ".
- Coercive_diplomacy wikiPageWikiLinkText "Coercive diplomacy".
- Coercive_diplomacy wikiPageWikiLinkText "coercive diplomacy".
- Coercive_diplomacy wikiPageWikiLinkText "dissuade".
- Coercive_diplomacy wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Diplomacy.
- Coercive_diplomacy wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Coercive_diplomacy subject Category:Monetary_hegemony.
- Coercive_diplomacy subject Category:Types_of_diplomacy.
- Coercive_diplomacy type Relation.
- Coercive_diplomacy comment "Coercive diplomacy or \"forceful persuasion\" is the \"attempt to get a target, a state, a group (or groups) within a state, or a nonstate actor-to change its objectionable behavior through either the threat to use force or the actual use of limited force.\" This term also refers to \"diplomacy presupposing the use or threatened use of military force to achieve political objectives.\" Coercive diplomacy \"is essentially a diplomatic strategy, one that relies on the threat of force rather than the use of force. ".
- Coercive_diplomacy label "Coercive diplomacy".
- Coercive_diplomacy sameAs Q5140826.
- Coercive_diplomacy sameAs Πειθαναγκασμός.
- Coercive_diplomacy sameAs Diplomacia_coercitiva.
- Coercive_diplomacy sameAs Prievartinė_diplomatija.
- Coercive_diplomacy sameAs m.02754wg.
- Coercive_diplomacy sameAs Q5140826.
- Coercive_diplomacy wasDerivedFrom Coercive_diplomacy?oldid=693546746.
- Coercive_diplomacy isPrimaryTopicOf Coercive_diplomacy.