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Article Summary of "Consider the Other Side's Choice" by Fisher, Roger, Elizabeth Kopelman and Andrea Kupfer Schneider
Citation: Fisher, Roger, Elizabeth Kopelman and Andrea Kupfer Schneider. "Consider the Other Side's Choice." Beyond Machiavelli: Tools for Coping with Conflict. Cambridge, London: Harvard University Press, 1994. Pp. 52-56.
This Article Summary written by: Mariya Yevsyukova, Conflict Research Consortium
It is important to understand the decision making process of the opponent. A good
technique for this can be making a table of the consequences of a decision for the other
party. It can consist of two columns: "consequences if I say YES" and
"consequences if I say NO" (p. 55).
The authors present such a chart for the decision on withdrawal from Kuwait for Saddam
Hussein. According to this chart, the consequences of saying NO to withdrawal were much
more attractive than those of saying YES. The chart appeared to be close to Hussein's view
of this decision, which can be concluded from his conversation with Yevgeni Primakov, the
Director of the Soviet Institute for World Economy and International Relations, in October
1990.
The choice of staying in Kuwait outweighed the choice of withdrawal because there was
no reason to believe that the US would remove its forces from Saudi Arabia after Iraqi
left Kuwait, that UN sanctions against Iraq would be lifted after withdrawal, that
Palestinian interests would be linked to withdrawal, that Iraqi access to the sea would be
ensured, etc. Thus, Hussein's position on this issue becomes understandable. Knowing this,
something could have been done to reduce his uncertainty about the consequences of the
decision to withdrawal.
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