Abstract(s)
In Afghanistan, Libya, Liberia and beyond, armed rebellions have begun when armies fell
apart. When does this occur? This paper conducts a large-N analysis of these army-splinter
rebellions, distinct from both non-military rebellions from below and from coups, using new data. It
finds that they follow a logic of state breakdown focusing on regime characteristics (personalist
regimes and the loss of superpower support at the end of the Cold War) rather than drivers of mass
mobilization from below. In contrast, these regime-level factors matter much less for the nonmilitary rebellions from below that dominate theorizing about civil war origins. This paper also
shows that one option for military rebels lies in not attempting a coup but instead heading straight
into a rebellion. This paper thus distinguishes highly different paths to armed conflict, validates the
state breakdown approach to why armies fall apart, and extends the well-known tradeoff between
coups and civil wars.