ABSTRACT

This book improves our understanding of battlefield coalitions, providing novel theoretical and empirical insight into their nature and capabilities, as well as the military and political consequences of their combat operations.

The volume provides the first dataset of battlefield coalitions, uses primary sources to understand how non-state actors of varying types form such groupings, reports interviews with policymakers illuminating North Atlantic Treaty Organization operations, and uses cases studies of various wars waged throughout the nineteenth, twentieth, and twenty-first centuries to understand how other such collectives have operated. Part I introduces battlefield coalitions as an object of study, demonstrating how they are distinct from other wartime collectives. Using a novel dataset of actors fighting in 492 battles during interstate wars waged between 1900 and 2003, it provides, for the first time, a comprehensive portrait of the universe of battlefield coalitions. Part II explores processes and dynamics involved in the formation of battlefield coalitions, addressing how potential coalition members prepare for future battles in peacetime (as well as the consequences of such preparations) and the dynamics of mission design. Part III focuses on how battlefield coalitions are organised and fight when combat ensues, notably their decision-making rules and practices, command structures, and learning capacities. Part IV addresses three curious tendencies observed in the operations of battlefield coalitions: partners under-providing effort in combat, rebels and terrorist networks persisting in cooperation even when their interests diverge, and members defecting from the collective. Part V concludes with a chapter outlining for future researchers what we know about battlefield coalitions and what remains to be understood.

This book will be of much interest to students of military and strategic studies, defence studies and International Relations.

part I|35 pages

Introducing Battlefield Coalitions

chapter 1|9 pages

Battlefield Coalitions

Preparation, Organisation, Execution

chapter 2|24 pages

A Century of Coalitions in Battle

Incidence, Composition, and Performance, 1900–2003

part II|48 pages

Preparation

chapter 3|25 pages

Exercising Escalation

Do Multinational Military Exercises Provoke Interstate Security Crises?

chapter 4|21 pages

When the Coalition Determines the Mission

NATO's Detour in Libya

part III|73 pages

Organisation

chapter 5|24 pages

Battlefield Coalitions as International Institutions

A Conceptual Framework

chapter 7|23 pages

Learning from Losing

How Defeat Shapes Coalition Dynamics in Wartime

part IV|77 pages

Execution

chapter 9|24 pages

Why Rebels Rely on Terrorists

The Persistence of the Taliban-al-Qaeda Battlefield Coalition in Afghanistan

chapter 10|23 pages

Coalitions and Wartime Diplomacy 1

Speaking with One Voice

part V|16 pages

Looking Ahead