Logo image
Today Ukraine, Tomorrow Taiwan? Assessing US Reputation and Deterrence across International Crises
Journal article   Open access

Today Ukraine, Tomorrow Taiwan? Assessing US Reputation and Deterrence across International Crises

Rachel Myrick and Chen Wang
International studies quarterly, Vol.70(1)
03/01/2026

Abstract

Government & Law Reputation for Resolve International Security International Relations Political Science Social Sciences China

When does a state's reputation for resolve transfer across separate international crises and deter future challengers? We propose three assumptions underlying "Cross-Crisis Reputational Deterrence" (CCRD). First, a defender's response to a crisis leads a new challenger to reassess the defender's reputation (reputation formation). Second, the new challenger draws inferences about how the defender would behave in a different future crisis scenario (transfer of reputation). Third, anticipating the defender's response, the challenger changes its preferences (deterrence by reputation). We test the CCRD logic by examining whether the initial US response to Russia's invasion of Ukraine impacted Chinese assertiveness toward Taiwan. A framing experiment in China in March 2022 finds that a weak US response to Russian aggression decreases perceptions of US resolve but does not ultimately impact Chinese attitudes toward Taiwan. Our findings illustrate the conditions under which CCRD is more or less likely to occur in international politics.

pdf
Full Text1.90 MBDownloadView
Open Access
url
Article Landing PageView
Published (Version of record)

Metrics

1 Record Views

Details

Logo image