Compliance-Gaining Theory as a Method to Analyze U.S. Support of the Free Syrian Army (FSA) Cover Image

Compliance-Gaining Theory as a Method to Analyze U.S. Support of the Free Syrian Army (FSA)
Compliance-Gaining Theory as a Method to Analyze U.S. Support of the Free Syrian Army (FSA)

Author(s): Peter Karleskint, Jonathan Matusitz
Subject(s): Government/Political systems, International relations/trade, Political behavior, Studies in violence and power, Geopolitics, Peace and Conflict Studies
Published by: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Jagiellońskiego
Keywords: civil war; collaboration; compliance-gaining theory; Free Syrian Army; global policy; persuasion; Syria; United States;

Summary/Abstract: This paper examines U.S. support of the Free Syrian Army (FSA) through compliance-gaining theory. By and large, the theory describes how one party is able to get another party to comply with specific demands. The particular compliance-gaining tactics explored in this analysis are ingratiation, debt, guilt, and compromise. Thanks to these tactics, we can better understand how a rebel group like the FSA has managed to convince a superpower like the U.S. to support it, in spite of the historical implications of supporting rebel groups in the past. To make its compliance-gaining stronger, the FSA has played up ideas or concepts like oil, trust, blame, obligation, and past U.S. military interventions to collaborate with the U.S. so as to bring down the Syrian government and, by the same token, resist Russian influence in Syria.

  • Issue Year: 11/2021
  • Issue No: 4
  • Page Range: 29-36
  • Page Count: 8
  • Language: English