Kahn's Escalation Ladder

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Subcrisis Maneuvering

We are interested here not in day-today maneuvers that do not raise the possibility of escalation, but only in the ones that manipulate, either deliberately or otherwise, the fear of escalation or eruption. It will be one of my theses that remote as the middle and upper rungs of the escalation ladder may seem, they often cast a long shadow before them and can greatly influence events well below the violence threshold, or even below that point in a conflict when the explicit threat of violence is voiced.

  1. Ostensible Crisis
  2. At this stage, the language of crisis is used, but with some degree of pretense. Either one or both sides assert, more or less openly and explicitly but not quite believably, that unless the dispute is quickly resolved, rungs of the escalation ladder will be climbed.

  3. Political, Economic and Diplomatic Gestures
  4. Legal but inconveniencing, unfair, unfriendly, discourteous, inequitable, or threatening acts are carried out against the opponent to punish, apply pressure, or convey messages. If this becomes very hostile, these acts are called "retortions"

  5. Solemn and Formal Declarations
  6. These are purely verbal but explicitly solemn and formal actions intended to demonstrate resolve and committal. They may be in the form of legislative resolutions, formal executive announcements, diplomatic notes, or other very explicit and obviously serious declarations. Such a resolution or proclamation may be a simple notice to other nations of one's policy in a certain geographical or other area, or it may address a conflict or dispute more directly. It may often be thought of as a pre-emptive or preventive escalation that tries to forestall escalation by the opponent.

Traditional Crises (the Boat Is Rocked)

In a thermonuclear balance of terror, both nations will be reluctant to start a crisis that could escalate, perhaps inadvertently, possibly even going beyond control and erupting into an all-out war. There is, therefore, a tendency not to let even a low-level crisis start—a constraint not to rock the nuclear boat.

  1. Hardening of Positions -- Confrontation of Wills
  2. When the situation becomes coercive rather than contractual, the antagonists often attempt to increase the credibility of their commitments by "bridge-burning" acts, a deliberate increasing of the stakes, perhaps a joining together of several issues with the deliberate purpose of making it harder for the other side to believe that one can be made to back down.

  3. Show of Force
  4. One side or the other may hint, or even make clear, that violence is "thinkable." If it does this by acts rather than words, we call it a "show of force."

  5. Significant Mobilization
  6. The accompaniment of a show of force by a modest mobilization that not only increases one's strength but also indicates a willingness to call on more force or to accelerate the arms race if necessary.

  7. "Legal" Harassment -- Retortions
  8. One can harass the opponent's prestige, property, or people legally. That is to say, one may act in a very hostile and provocative manner, but within the limits of international law.

  9. Harassing Acts of Violence
  10. If the crisis is still not resolved, more or less illegal acts of violence or other incidents designed to harass, confuse, exhaust, violate, discredit, frighten, and otherwise harm, weaken, or demoralize the opponent or his allies and friends may be carried out through clandestine or unattributed channels, or through limited paramilitary or other overt agencies.

  11. Dramatic Military Confrontations
  12. If there is a direct ("eyeball to eyeball") confrontation that appears to be a stark test of nerves, committal, resolve, or recklessness, all participants and observers will take an intense interest in the proceedings.

Intense Crises

Nuclear War is Unthinkable Threshold

  1. Provocative Breaking off of Diplomatic Relations
  2. Super-Ready Status
  3. Large Conventional War (or Actions)
  4. Large Compound Escalator
  5. Declaration of Limited Conventional War
  6. Barely Nuclear War
  7. Nuclear "Ultimatums"
  8. Limited Evaluations (20%)
  9. Spectacular Show or Demonstration of Force
  10. "Justifiable" Counterforce Attack
  11. "Peaceful" World-Wide Embargo or Blockade

Bizarre Crises

No Nuclear Use Threshold

  1. Local Nuclear War -- Exemplary
  2. Declaration of Limited Nuclear War
  3. Local Nuclear War -- Military
  4. Unusual, Provocative and Significant Countermeasures
  5. Evacuation (70%)

Exemplary Central Attacks

Central Sanctuary Threshold

  1. Demonstration Attack on Zone of Interior
  2. Exemplary Attack on Military
  3. Exemplary Attacks Against Property
  4. Exemplary Attacks on Population
  5. Complete Evacuation (95%)
  6. Reciprocal Reprisals

Military Central Wars

Central War Threshold

  1. Formal Declaration of "General" War
  2. Slow-Motion Counter-"Property" War
  3. Slow-Motion Counterforce War
  4. Constrained Force-Reduction Salvo
  5. Constrained Disarming Attack
  6. Counterforce-with-Avoidance Attack
  7. Unmodified Counterforce Attack

Civilian Central Wars

City Targeting Threshold

  1. Slow-Motion Countercity war
  2. Countervalue Salvo
  3. Augmented Disarming Attack
  4. Civilian Devastation Attack
  5. Controlled General War
  6. Spasm/Insensate War
  7. There may be situations in which striking a center of gravity might deliver a fatal blow; but the enemy might still be able to retaliate with a lethal or unacceptably damaging response, much like a spider whose legs continue to strike after it is dead. This phenomenon is what nuclear strategist Herman Kahn once referred to as “insensate war" and it is still a possibility in today’s globalized world,