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  1. In military terms, deterrence success refers to preventing state leaders from issuing military threats and actions that escalate peacetime diplomatic and military co-operation into a crisis or militarized confrontation that threatens armed conflict and possibly war.

  2. 29 de abr. de 2024 · Deterrence, military strategy under which one power uses the threat of reprisal effectively to preclude an attack from an adversary power. With the advent of nuclear weapons, the term deterrence largely has been applied to the basic strategy of the nuclear powers and of the major alliance systems.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Deterrence is the practice of discouraging or restraining someone— in world politics, usually a nation-state—from taking unwanted actions, such as an armed attack.

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  4. 28 de mar. de 2022 · Integrated deterrence entails developing and combining our strengths to maximum effect, by working seamlessly across warfighting domains, theaters, the spectrum of conflict, other instruments...

  5. 12 de mar. de 2024 · Hal Brands and Zack Cooper assess six major trade-offs the Pentagon and U.S. civilian leaders will face in resetting U.S. deterrence strategy in the Western Pacific in the coming years.

  6. Coercion simply means compelling adversaries to do something, while deterrence is dissuading opponents from doing something. Together, these strategies constitute the fundamental dynamic driving most peacetime and wartime situations, at the highest echelons of diplomacy as well as the lowest levels of tactics.

  7. 19 de abr. de 2018 · Deterrence is about much more than merely threatening an adversary. It must be conceived primarily as an effort to shape the thinking of a potential aggressor. Any strategy to prevent aggression must begin with an assessment of the potential aggressor's interests, motives, and imperatives.