This paper seeks to prove that under a large class of group decision rules some sincere voting situations will be unstable because of strategic manipulation by single individuals. The concept of stability used is weaker than the stability concepts figuring in many earlier contributions in this area, insofar as under the concept used here any individual, while disrupting a given voting situation, considers the possibility of retaliation by other individuals. DUMMETT AND FARQUHARSON [2], Murakami [7], Farquharson [3], Sen [14], Gibbard [4], Satterthwaite [13], and Pattanaik [10, 11, and 12] have discussed various aspects of the problem of stability in voting. The general conclusion which emerges from these writings seems to be that stability of all possible sincere voting situations (which implies the absence of strategic distortion of preferences by voters) is an extremely rare feature of democratic group decision procedures. However, the notion of stability or equilibrium underlying many of these contributions is a simple one and does not take into account several phenomena usually associated with strategic voting such as the possibility of counter-coalitions when a coalition (of one or more individuals) threatens to disrupt a voting situation. The purpose of this paper is twofold. First, it introduces a less demanding notion of stability which takes into account the possibility of formation of countercoalitions when an individual seeks to influence the outcome in his own favor by strategic manipulations in voting. Secondly, using this very weak notion of stability, it is shown that, while under the changed definition the possibility of having unstable sincere voting situations because of strategic voting by single individuals is somewhat reduced, invulnerability of all possible sincere voting situations to voting maneuvres of single individuals still remains a very rare property among democratic group decision rules based on pairwise comparisons. We lay down the basic notation and some preliminary definitions in Section 1. In Section 2 we introduce a notion of stability taking into account the possibility of counter-coalitions. Using this very weak definition of stability, in Section 3 we show that under most democratic group decision rules based on pairwise comparisons, there is the danger of having unstable sincere voting situations owing to strategic manipulations by single individuals. We conclude in Section 4.