Article
from Journal of Peace Research

Too Brutal for War: Comparing Rationales for Weapon Taboos

Decades of scholarship on so-called “taboo” weapons have examined individual systems or a limited set of comparisons. By contrast, this article examines how the U.S. public evaluates different weapon types in military strikes, comparing aversions across conventional, nuclear, chemical, biological, cluster, and cyber systems. The authors use a conjoint survey experiment  to isolate the effects of weapon choice, expected civilian casualties, and operational effectiveness on support for military action. They find a clear hierarchy of preferences that is rooted in powerful heuristics about weapon type. This leads respondents to make notable trade-offs in their attitudes toward wartime actions.

 

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Cluster bomb
Shown in the 1960s at the U.S. Army’s Rocky Mountain Arsenal, the M190 Honest John cluster chemical warhead contained demonstration sarin bomblets.

ABSTRACT

What makes a weapon too horrific to use? This study investigates public attitudes toward the use of different weapon types using a conjoint survey experiment fielded on a U.S. sample. By randomly varying key attributes of military strikes—expected civilian casualties, operational effectiveness, and weapon type—we isolate the causal effects of each on public support. Casualty estimates exert the strongest influence, and effectiveness also matters. But we find that respondents rely heavily on powerful categorical heuristics about weapon types. These preferences persist even when other strike characteristics are held constant. The results reveal a robust hierarchy: cyber attacks were most favored, followed by conventional strikes, then cluster munitions over chemical, biological, and finally nuclear weapons. In fact, military operations using more favored weapons were often supported over more effective, or less lethal, ones employing disfavored armaments. These patterns reflect public intuitions about which weapons are perceived as brutal, indiscriminate, or illegitimate. Our study therefore has broad theoretical implications for understanding how weapon taboos interact with instrumental factors. It offers vital insights into the complex interplay of public preferences for military operations, weapon transfers, and arms control.

Recommended citation

Allison, David M., Stephen Herzog, and Lauren Sukin. "Too Brutal for War: Comparing Rationales for Weapon Taboos." Journal of Peace Research. 2026.

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