Talking to the enemy: Explaining the emergence of peace talks in interstate war

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Abstract

Why are some states open to talking while fighting while others are not? We argue that a state considering opening negotiations is concerned not only with the adverse inference that the opposing state will draw, but also the actions that the opposing state might take in response to that inference. We use a formal model, with assumptions grounded in extensive historical evidence, to highlight one particular response to opening negotiations—the escalation of war efforts—and one particular characteristic of the state opening negotiations—its resilience to escalation. We find that states are willing to open negotiations under two conditions: when their opponents find escalation too costly, and when there is a signal of high resilience that only the highly resilient care to use. To illustrate the dynamics of the second condition, we offer an extended case study detailing North Vietnam’s changing approach to negotiations during the Vietnam War.

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Mastro, O. S., & Siegel, D. A. (2023). Talking to the enemy: Explaining the emergence of peace talks in interstate war. Journal of Theoretical Politics, 35(3), 182–203. https://doi.org/10.1177/09516298231185112

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