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Live and let live (World War I)

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Live and let live (World War I)

thumb|alt=Officers cooking near the Western Front during World War I|Four Royal Fusiliers officers cooking near the Western Front during World War I

Examples This behaviour was found at the small-unit level, sections, platoons or companies, usually observed by the "other ranks", e.g., privates and non-commissioned officers. Examples were found from the lone soldier standing sentry duty, refusing to fire on exposed enemy soldiers, up to snipers, machine-guns teams and even field-artillery batteries.

Upper echelon commanders—those of divisions, corps and armies—and their staffs were aware of this tendency towards non-aggression, and would sometimes analyse casualty statistics to detect it. Raids or patrols were often ordered to foster the correct "offensive spirit" in the troops.

The Live and Let Live system was fragile at best and was easily broken by occurrences of lethal force, becoming even more tenuous as the war dragged on.

Research Tony Ashworth researched this topic based upon diaries, letters, and testimonies of veterans from the war. He discovered that 'live and let live' was widely known about at the time and was most common at specific times and places. It was often to be found when a unit had been withdrawn from battle and was sent to a rest sector.

Game theory Some scholars of game-theory, like Robert Axelrod, have characterised Live and Let Live as an iterated variant of the prisoner's-dilemma. Axelrod linked Live and Let Live to the co-operative strategy referred to as tit-for-tat.

Axelrod's interpretation of "Live and Let Live" as a prisoner's dilemma has been disputed by political scientists Joanne Gowa and Andrew Gelman, who (separately) argue that the assumptions underlying the prisoner's dilemma do not hold in this example.

See also * Fraternization

References ## Further reading Ashworth, Tony. (1968). "The sociology of trench warfare 1914–18", British Journal of Sociology*, 19:407–23. [[robert-axelrod-(political-scientist)|Axelrod, Robert]]. (2006). the-evolution-of-cooperation*, Revised edition. Perseus Books Group, Sheffield, G. D. (2000). Leadership in the Trenches: Officer-Man Relations, Morale and Discipline in the British Army in the Era of the First World War*. Basingstoke: Macmillan. Collaboration. (2007) Meetings in No Man's Land*. Constable & Robinson. Dawkins, Richard. (1976). The Selfish Gene* 30th Anniversary Edition Oxford.