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How “Free” is Free Riding in Civil Wars?: Violence, Insurgency, and the Collective Action Problem
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 June 2011
Abstract
That rebels face a collective action problem is one of the most widely shared assumptions in the literature on civil wars. The authors argue that the collective action paradigm can be both descriptively inaccurate and analytically misleading when it comes to civil wars. They question both pillars of the paradigm as applied to the study of civil wars, namely, the free-riding incentive generated by the public goods dimension of insurgency and the risks of individual participation in insurgent collective action. The authors argue, instead, that although insurgent collective action may entail the expectation of future collective benefits, public (rather than just private) costs tend to predominate in the short term. Moreover, the costs of nonparticipation and free riding may equal or even exceed those of participation. The authors support these claims by triangulating three types of evidence: historical evidence from counterinsurgency operations in several civil wars; data from the Vietnam War's Phoenix Program; and regional evidence from the Greek Civil War. They conclude by drawing implications for the study of civil wars.
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References
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37 See Kalyvas (fn. 7).
38 Why should we assume this? Experience with the peacetime court systems of advanced industrial countries teaches that distinguishing guilt from innocence is an inexact science. In civil war the scale of the problem alone should increase the proportion of false positives. The logic of malicious denunciation leads us to anticipate an even higher proportion ofjunk intelligence in insurgencies. The selection mechanism we elaborate adds insult to injury.
39 This discussion draws on Kalyvas (fn. 7).
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50 Kalyvas (fn. 7).
31 For instance, a U.S. marine was given a sentence of eight years for killing an civilian, Iraqi“who was known to support the American occupation”; New York Times, February 19, 2007, A6Google Scholar.
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59 National Archives and Records Administration (NARA), National Police Infrastructure Analysis Subsystem-II (Records Group 330. Accession no. 3–349–79–002-D).
60 It is important to keep in mind that the Phoenix Program counted all of the individuals on the list as Vietcong agents. It is our assumption, based on a reasonable understanding of insurgency processes, that many of these individuals were incorrectly identified. Our task is to determine how many.
61 Note, as well, that we have no way of ascertaining the effect of this perverse selection on insurgent recruitment. Kalyvas (fn. 7) suggests that a key variable in the efficacy of selective violence is not accurate selection per se but, rather, is the perception among the population that targeting is based on accurate selection. Such analysis would require data currently not available in the case of the Vietnam War.
62 According to NPIASS-II, Phoenix was aware of the “current address” of nearly 64 percent of confirmed persons but less than 1 percent of unconfirmed persons. Likewise, nearly 23 percent of confirmed persons but less than 1 percent of unconfirmed persons were the subjects of individualized arrest warrants. These data strongly suggest that significantly greater effort was oriented toward those under higher suspicion.
63 pvn stands for “proportion of Vietcong neutralized” and pin stands for “proportion of innocents neutralized.”
64 There is some disagreement in the methodological literature over the use of the odds ratio to express the size of effects. Note that this issue has no bearing on our analysis, because we do not attempt to use the odds ratio as an absolute measure of anything. We merely equate the odds ratios of two different comparisons.
65 Why use killed + captured instead of just killed? Both capture and assassination require that an individual be physically located and identified by forces sufficient to take action against him. Still, this is a conservative assumption. Since defection was a good way to avoid being killed or captured (and sentenced to prison), we might expect innocent but threatened individuals to take this option at higher rates than would highly committed Vietcong agents, essentially shrinking the pool of potential unconfirmed victims faster than the pool of potential confirmed victims.
66 Thayer (fn. 56). As an important Defense Department analyst during the Vietnam War, Thayer had access to all the data we use here, as well as to much that remains classified. His book does not consider the possibility we suggest, perhaps because it was simply inconceivable to him that the Phoenix Program was not merely unproductive but was actually counterproductive. Although it is true that the majority of people “neutralized” by Phoenix were believed to be low ranking, this result follows straightforwardly from the pyramidal form of any military or bureaucratic organization.
67 Indeed, the files of captured persons were updated an average of 1.3 times, much more often than were the files of those who were killed (0.33 times), who rallied (0.33), or who remained at large (0.59).
68 By “extreme” we mean the two solutions with the largest and smallest number of innocents victimized. In this context there are various ways to conceive of an intermediate solution. We chose a solution in which the number of innocents versus Vietcong victimized is intermediate between the extremes.
69 Models 1 and 2 differ only in their operationalization of age. Model 1 collapses age into four categories (under 18,18–31, 32–44, 45 and older). Model 2 uses a binary indicator for “military age,” equal to 1 if a person was 18–44 years old, 0 for those both younger and older. We focus our discussion on model 2.
70 Jones, Adam, “Gendercide and Genocide,” Journal of Genocide Research 2 (June 2000CrossRefGoogle Scholar)
71 Note also that there is evidence of sex and age profiling for selection into the Phoenix list as a whole: over 70 percent of the persons on the list were of military age; over 75 percent were men.
72 Thayer (fn. 56).
73 Elliott (fn. 48), 1137.
74 “Certain CF military intelligence officers told the ICRC that in their estimate between 70% and 90% of the persons deprived of their liberty in Iraq had been arrested by mistake. They also attributed the brutality of some arrests to the lack of proper supervision of battle group units.” See International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), Report ofthe International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) on the Treatment by the Coalition Forces of Prisoners of War and Other Protected Persons by the Geneva Conventions in Iraq during Arrest, Internment and Interrogation (Geneva:ICRC, 2004), 8Google Scholar. Even the highly selec tive process by which individuals were shipped to Guantanamo appears to have suffered from similar problems: it turns out that 92 percent of the 517 Guantanamo detainees were not al-Qaeda fighters, while 95 percent of them were not captured by the Americans themselves; some 86 percent were handed over in Afghanistan and Pakistan after a widespread campaign in which big financial bounties were offered in exchange for anyone suspected of links to al-Qaeda and the Taliban. Simpson, John, “No Surprises in the War on Terror,” BBC News, February 13, 2006Google Scholar, http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/ middle_east/4708946.stm (accessed February 14,2006).
75 One indication that local politics played a key role in the Phoenix Program stems from our knowledge of the sources of information. The intelligence used to identify Vietcong agents was attributed in nearly 56 percent of all cases to the Regional Forces, Popular Forces, or Civilian Irregular Defense Group militias, rather than to police or regular military forces of the U.S. or South Vietnam.
76 Moyar, Mark, Phoenix andthe Birds ofPrey: The CIA'S Secret Campaign to Destroy the Viet Cong napolis:Naval Institute Press, 1997), 114Google Scholar.
77 Ibid., 116.
78 Ibid., 293.
79 Binford (fn. 52), 107.
80 Moyar (fn. 76), 122.
81 Elliott (fn. 48), 947.
82 Quoted in Maass, Peter, “The Way of the Commandos,” New York Times Magazine, May 1, 2005, 47Google Scholar.
83 The rosters of the local prison in the town of Nafplio show over one thousand individuals held there during the same period. Hundreds more were sent to a concentration camp in the neighboring town of Konnthos, while a smaller but unspecified number were sent to slave labor camps in Germany. However, the Germans did not take rebel prisoners. Indeed, a significant proportion of the rebels killed in action were shot after being captured. A common practice of German occupation troops was to list most civilian victims as rebel fatalities. See H. F. Meyer, Von Wien nach Kalavryta: Die blutige Spur der 117:Jdger-Division durch Serbien und Griechenland [From Vienna to Kalavryta. The Bloody Trail of the 117 Jaeger Division through Serbia and Greece] (Moehnesee: Bibliopolis, 2002). Careful disaggregation based on extensive archival and field research confirms the intuition of many historians that most of these “partisan fatalities” were in fact civilians fleeing the German advance.
84 On top of the twenty fatalities suffered during the occupation, the regiment lost fifteen more local fighters during the battle of Athens (December 1944), when the communists attempted to seize power. They are not included in the analysis since violence against civilians subsided after the end of the occupation. Our source on rebel fatalities is Vazeos, Emmanouil, Ta agnosia paraskinia tis Ethnikis Antistaseos eis tin Pehponnison [The Unknown Backstage of the National Resistance in the Pelopon-nese] (Korinthos:Self-published, 1961Google Scholar). The 6th Regiment of ELAS, which was active in the Argolid and Korinthia areas and recruited primarily from these two regions, reached thirty-five hundred men in October 1944, after the occupation's end; many of these men were recruited or conscripted after the German evacuation. The regiment's full force prior to this was closer to five hundred men. Data on militiamen were collected from archival sources and civil registries.
85 Stoll (fn. 49).
86 In light of this analysis it should not comes as a surprise that mass displacement is so common in civil wars. Nevertheless, it is rarely the first choice of civilian populations: rural populations depend on land for their livelihood and abandon their villages only under tremendous pressure. Flight is not a form of free riding. It carries substantial costs and is often not an option for military-age men who may be shot attempting to flee (hence the predominance of women, children, and the old in refugee camps).
87 Tullock (fn.2),93.
88 McNeill, William H., The Greek Dilemma: War and Aftermath (Philadelphia:J. B. Lippincott, 1947), 80–81Google Scholar.
89 An implication is that club goods should be common across all types of armed groups. Jeremy Weinstein has suggested instead that only well-funded rebel organizations recruit via club goods (mainly loot). Consequently, they attract opportunistic and undisciplined individuals who abuse the civilian population. Aside from the assumption that individuals joining an armed group to acquire club goods cannot be socialized to become motivated and disciplined combatants later, this argument requires a key condition: that the state facing the rebels must be exceedingly weak or even nonexistent. Otherwise, an army with these characteristics has little chance of surviving. See Weinstein, Jeremy M., Inside Rebellion: The Politics of Insurgent Violence (New York:Cambridge University Press, 2007Google Scholar).
90 Why, then, would individuals join “go nowhere” insurgencies? An answer is that they are attracted by access to club goods.
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