Conflict escalation

Conflict escalation is the process by which conflicts grow in severity over time. This may refer to conflicts between individuals or groups in interpersonal relationships, or it may refer to the escalation of hostilities in a political or military context. In systems theory, the process of conflict escalation is modeled by positive feedback.

While the word escalation was used as early as in 1938, it was popularized during the Cold War by two[1] important books: On Escalation (Herman Kahn, 1965) and Escalation and the Nuclear Option (Bernard Brodie, 1966). In these contexts, it especially referred to war between two states with weapons of mass destruction—the Cold War.

Conflict escalation has a tactical role in military conflict, and is often formalized with explicit rules of engagement. Highly successful military tactics exploit a particular form of conflict escalation; for example, controlling an opponent's reaction time allows the tactician to pursue or trap his opponent. Napoleon and Heinz Guderian both advocated this approach. Sun Tzu elaborated it in a more abstract form, and additionally maintained that military strategy was about minimizing escalation, and diplomacy about eliminating it.

Continuum of Force

The United States Marine Corps' "Continuum of Force" (found in MCRP 3-02B) documents the stages of Conflict escalation in combat for a typical subject. They are:

The subject responds to and obeys verbal commands. He refrains from close combat.

The subject resists verbal commands but complies to commands immediately upon contact controls. He refrains from close combat.

Initially, the subject physically resists commands, but he can be made to comply by compliance techniques; these include come-along holds, soft-handed stunning blows, and techniques inducing pain by joint manipulation and pressure points.

The unarmed subject physically attacks his opponent. He can be controlled by certain defensive tactics, including blocks, strikes, kicks, enhanced pain compliance procedures, impact weapon blocks and blows.

The subject has a weapon and will likely kill or injure someone unless controlled. This is only possible by lethal force, which possibly requires firearms or weapons.

Preventing conflict escalation

A major focus of peace and conflict theory is concerned with curbing conflict escalation or creating a mindset to avoid such conflict in future, and instead engaging in peacemaking. Much nonviolent conflict resolution, however, involves conflict escalation in the form of protests, strikes, or other direct actions.

Mohandas Gandhi, a major proponent of nonviolence, used satyagraha to demonstrate that:

With this method of escalation, Gandhi avoided technological escalation and demonstrated to those in power that:

Conflict Escalation Curve

The Conflict Escalation Curve is a concept created by Dr. Michael Nagler. The Conflict Escalation Curve operates from the nonviolence point of view that the intensity of a conflict is directly related to how far dehumanization has proceeded. In other words, conflicts escalate in the degree to which parties dehumanize one another (or one party is dehumanizing the other). The Curve conceptualizes a typical trajectory a conflict would have if it were plotted on an (x,y) graph with (x) being time elapsed and (y) being the intensity of dehumanization. It is important thing to bear in mind is that nonviolence, like violence, also comes in degrees.[2] Depending upon which stage a conflict is on the graph, a specific set of responses is needed.

The Curve divides the appropriate responses, then, into three stages: Stage 1: Conflict Resolution Stage 2: Satyagraha Stage 3: The Last Resort

The Three Stages of Conflict Escalation

How to use the Conflict Escalation Curve The Conflict Escalation Curve helps those in a movement have a sense of where they are in their conflict and what is an appropriate response; it would be wrong to reach for an extreme method like fasting (which is Stage 3- Sacrifice) in a situation when all available tools in Stage 1 or 2 have not been tried. On the other hand, in 2003, US President George W. Bush dismissed the global anti-Iraq protests, the largest such protests since the Vietnam War, as “a focus group,” saying: “Size of protest-it’s like deciding, well, I’m going to decide policy based upon a focus group.”[4] The President’s lack of acknowledgement of protesters’ demands as well as his unwillingness to engage in negotiations were an indication that it was necessary for the movement to quickly move to Stage 2 if they were to get any response. This was not forthcoming.

Systems view

Gandhi himself did not elaborate these observations on nonviolent strategy; Carol Moore, a later theorist, examined and described Gandhi's methods from the perspective of systems theory. Jay Forrester and Donella Meadows observed that people in crisis would often push the twelve leverage points towards escalation in the first stage, and then reduce escalation when the resistance had weakened and it was impossible to maintain the status quo.

References

  1. Freedman, Lawrence (1993). The evolution of nuclear strategy (2nd ed.). New York: St Martin's press. pp. 198–199. ISBN 0-312-02843-1.
  2. Is There No Other Way? : The Search for a Nonviolent Future
  3. K. Shridharani, "War without Violence" P. 252.
  4. Stevenson, Richard (2003-02-19). "Antiwar Protests Fail to Sway Bush on Plans for Iraq". NY Times. Retrieved 4 December 2014.
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