Abstract

Why do great powers with benign intentions end up fighting each other in wars they do not seek? We utilize an incentivized, two-person “Preemptive Strike Game” (PSG) to explore how the subjective perception of great power interdependence shapes defensive aggression against persons from rival great powers. In Study 1, college students from the United States (N = 115), China (N = 106), and Japan (N = 99) made PSG decisions facing each other. This natural experiment revealed that Chinese and Japanese participants (a) made more preemptive attacks against each other and Americans than against their compatriots, and that (b) greater preexisting perceptions of bilateral competition increased intergroup attack rates. In Study 2, adult Americans (N = 127) watched real CNN expert interviews portraying United States–China economic interdependence as more positive or negative. This randomized experiment revealed that the more positive portrayal reduced preemptive American strikes against Chinese (but not Japanese), while the more negative portrayal amplified American anger about China’s rise, increasing preemptive attacks against Chinese. We also found, however, that preemptive strikes were primarily defensive and not offensive. Interventions to reduce defensive aggression and promote great power peace are discussed.

Highlights

  • “The greater the threat, the greater is the risk of inaction – and the more compelling the case for taking anticipatory action to defend ourselves. . .”

  • In two studies based on a two-person, incentivized decision task, the Preemptive Strike Game (PSG; Simunovic et al, 2013), we explore how perceived great power relations shape defensive preemptive aggression between citizens of those great powers

  • Pairwise comparisons indicated that United States–China relations were perceived as more competitive

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

“The greater the threat, the greater is the risk of inaction – and the more compelling the case for taking anticipatory action to defend ourselves. . .”. While experimental psychological research on intergroup aggression is better equipped to make causal arguments about the drivers of individual behavior, it has largely relied upon artificial groups (i.e., minimal groups; Tajfel, 1970), seldom examining real-world conflicts This project seeks to fill this research gap, exploring the psychological drivers of the defensive aggression that can lead to great power war in the 21st Century. To explore the psychological drivers of preemptive strikes between persons from rival countries, we build on social interdependence theory (e.g., Deutsch, 1985; for a review, see Johnson, 2003) It maintains that how people perceive socially interdependent situations shapes their choices to cooperate or compete (Halevy et al, 2012a). We implemented further measures to explore whether any preemptive strikes taken were more defensively or offensively driven

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RESULTS
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GENERAL DISCUSSION
Limitations and Future
ETHICS STATEMENT
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