In the eye of the beholder : how leaders and intelligence communities assess the intentions of adversaries / Keren Yarhi-Milo.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: 2013Subject(s): In: International Security Vol 38 No 1, Summer 2013, pp.7-51 (68)Summary: Uses three case studies to assess the "selective attention thesis" as a new tool for understanding how leaders decide what the long-term political intentions of their states' adversaries are likely to be. Compares this approach with other rationalist theories (behaviour thesis and capability thesis). The cases considered are the Carter administration assessment of USSR intentions during the collapse of detente 1977-1980; the Reagan administration assessment of Soviet intentions during the end of the Cold War 1985-1988; and British assessment of German intentions before the outbreak of the Second World War 1934-1939.
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Journal Article Mindef Library & Info Centre Journals INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Not for loan 41513-1001

Uses three case studies to assess the "selective attention thesis" as a new tool for understanding how leaders decide what the long-term political intentions of their states' adversaries are likely to be. Compares this approach with other rationalist theories (behaviour thesis and capability thesis). The cases considered are the Carter administration assessment of USSR intentions during the collapse of detente 1977-1980; the Reagan administration assessment of Soviet intentions during the end of the Cold War 1985-1988; and British assessment of German intentions before the outbreak of the Second World War 1934-1939.

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