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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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It is not descriptive of what happens empirically.

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      Before fleshing out these arguments in greater detail, a crucial question remains: what exactly is a military alliance? This question is deceptively simple, not least because news media often invoke the term to describe a wide variety of security arrangements like NATO, bilateral partnerships that involve the United States and countries such as Israel, Saudi Arabia, and Pakistan, as well as the burgeoning cooperation between China and Russia. And indeed, some scholars would agree that such relationships constitute alliances. Michael Barnett and Jack Levy (1991: 370) define an alliance “in its broadest sense to refer to a formal or informal relationship of security cooperation between two or more states and involving mutual expectations of some degree of policy coordination on security issues under certain conditions in the future.” In his seminal study on alliances, Stephen Walt (1987: 12) similarly defines them as “a formal or informal arrangement for security cooperation between two or more sovereign states.” As such, scholars have counted alliances in all sorts of ways, creating confusion as to the true count, and running the risk of comparing apples to oranges. Mira Rapp-Hooper (2020: 17) writes, for example, that the United States had thirty-seven allies as of 2020, but she includes in her count Israel and Pakistan (which do not have a formal defense agreement with the United States) and omits countries that make up the Inter-American Treaty of Reciprocal Assistance, popularly known as the Rio Pact (which notionally does contain one).

      First, only sovereign states have military alliances. Sovereignty is, of course, a fraught concept. Few states, if any, are fully sovereign in terms of their own domestic and foreign policies, whether because they delegate some juridical authority to international organizations, subordinate some decision-making to a stronger state, or both (Krasner 1999). In the modern context, though, a country is at least nominally sovereign if it has its own representation at international bodies and, most importantly, is recognized as a state by other states. Of course, violent nonstate actors can align themselves with states or even other nonstate actors so as to have an alliance in the common sense of the term (Tamm 2016; see also Grynaviski 2015). The most famous formal example is the 1778 Treaty of Alliance signed by the Kingdom of France and the Thirteen United States of America during the American Revolutionary War. This example notwithstanding, such relationships are often ad hoc and, as we will see, lack the other key ingredients that make up a military alliance. That said, sovereign states can forge, and have forged, military alliances in order to counter threats emanating from transnational movements.

      By stressing the importance of having a written treaty, I exclude informal partnerships or alignments that other scholars like Barnett, Levy, and Walt include in their studies. I also do not cover so-called “alliances of convenience” – that is, instances where adversaries cooperate informally to tackle urgent security challenges (Resnick 2010/11). I believe excluding them is defensible on several grounds. Incorporating both informal (i.e., nontreaty) and formal (i.e., treaty) arrangements in a definition of alliance blurs the distinction between friendly diplomacy and active military partnership. We distinguish between dating and marriage when we discuss romantic relations because they entail different expectations and obligations. We should make similar distinctions with respect to international security cooperation. Treating alignment and alliance as interchangeable introduces unnecessary difficulties in measuring the concept: in the absence of a treaty, how much alignment must we see for it to qualify as a military alliance? The answer to this question is not self-evident. In emphasizing the formal signing of military alliances, I avoid these difficulties. Nevertheless, I am aware that other problems could arise with my decision. The United States is a treaty ally of North Macedonia via NATO, but not of Israel or Saudi Arabia. China and Russia arguably engage in more military cooperation now than some treaty allies have had historically. The reinvigorated Quadrilateral Security Dialogue (the Quad) – comprising Australia, India, Japan, and the United States – does not qualify as an alliance because it is not based on documented security guarantees. Why, then, leave out these more strategically significant relationships from the analysis? Suffice it to say for now, not extending a treaty to such states, however closely aligned they appear to be, is a deliberate choice to avoid the very problems that can come with alliances.


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