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Military Alliances in the Twenty-First Century. Alexander LanoszkaЧитать онлайн книгу.

Military Alliances in the Twenty-First Century - Alexander Lanoszka


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made by their weaker members, then what explains them? Why, to reiterate the puzzle, is the United States able to accumulate so many allies? Geography is one possible explanation. Specifically, the United States is separated from most of its allies by oceans. Thanks to physical distance, allies have less reason to fear it and so they are much more concerned with threats closer to home. They can leverage support from Washington to help deter nearby adversaries. The problem with this explanation – intuitive though it may be – is that geography is a double-edged sword. The United States may be less threatening because it is far away, but it may also be less militarily useful – and perhaps even unreliable – because it has to make up a lot of distance if it wishes to fight an adversary alongside a far-flung ally. Moreover, geographically contiguous states can be allies, and very good ones at that. Canada may fear the domination of US cultural products in its own domestic marketplace; it can even be anxious about preserving its own autonomy. Nevertheless, it does not fear a land invasion given that it engages in defense cooperation with the United States (Bow 2009). Joseph Jockel and Joel Sokolsky (2009: 323–4) even argue that Ottawa enjoys an “involuntary guarantee” from Washington because so many Canadians live close to the US border. In Central Asia, states such as Kazakhstan participate in the CSTO, of which Russia is the most powerful country. They too worry about their autonomy vis-à-vis the Kremlin, but they still willingly engage in some joint military exercises and other forms of military-to-military cooperation (Costa Buranelli 2018: 389). Of course, geographically contiguous allies may sometimes lack agency and be subject to domination because the powerful state projects a preponderance of power over them. At the beginning, many Warsaw Pact countries took directives from Moscow in part because the local presence of commissars and the Red Army had an outsized impact on local domestic politics (see Rice 1984). Geography is not destiny.

      There are, of course, benefits in allying with a weaker state. The example of the Soviet bloc suggests how political control over domestic and foreign policy can be one such benefit, but again such control is often incomplete and can dissipate over time (Cooley and Spruyt 2009). A second benefit is to acquire so-called defense-in-depth. In military parlance, defense-in-depth refers to a strategy where an attacker must confront successively robust layers of defensive points designed to absorb the first blow, delay the attacker’s forces, and buy time for the defender to respond. A third, cruder benefit is that allies can be buffer states if they provide a battleground away from the territory of the great power where fighting with the adversary will first take place. The Soviet presence in East Germany and Poland offered Moscow this defense-in-depth against Western Europe, which it did not really have prior to the Second World War. Still, a defense-in-depth strategy or a buffer zone is no good if allies wrangle with each other. In cases where allies have a history of acrimonious relations with one another, extending security guarantees to each of them can help diffuse tensions by reassuring them both that their interests are heeded. The US military presence in Europe has, arguably, had this stabilizing effect. By becoming a European power in its own right during the Cold War, the United States inserted itself between France and West Germany, allaying concerns that the historical antagonisms they had for each other could resurface and would lead each to take up their disputes with military force again.

      Strong states should not have to sign treaties if they wish to extract concessions from smaller states. They should be able to do so by dint of their strength alone, in keeping with the oft-repeated notion that “the strong do what they can and the weak suffer as they must.” Strong states presumably have options other than alliance commitment if they wish to safeguard another state from external attack. As the United States did with Saudi Arabia between the 1990–1


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