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The Great Asymmetry America's Closest Allies in Times of War.

机译:战争时期美国最大的不对称盟友。

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摘要

This dissertation focuses on military cooperation between the United States and its special allies. It argues that alliance expectations determine the level of military cooperation, while two intervening variables - the level of government cohesion and military capabilities - determine its implementation. This study also shows how secondary states deploy strategies to overcome power asymmetries through bilateral concessions, international organizations and by appealing to principle. The focus of the research is on special allies, as they have the most to gain or lose by going along with American plans. My contention is that secondary allies can rarely influence the dominant ally decisively, but they can act autonomously and resist to pressures exerted by the stronger alliance partner.;To examine the theoretical puzzle presented by asymmetric military cooperation, I introduce a causal explanation that builds on neoclassical realism, to zone in on the interaction between systemic and domestic variables. My research makes a contribution to alliance theory and foreign policy decision-making by studying how special allies respond to American decisions in times of threat and how systemic constraints are channeled through state-level variables.;To investigate the causal link between threat perception, alliance expectations and domestic constraints, this study relies on the method of structured focused comparison with three detailed case studies. The focus is on the initial decision made by special allies regarding whether or not to participle in joint mobilization with the United States. The decision-making process is presented from the perspective of secondary allied states and measures the explanatory factors that motivated the decision on military cooperation. The case studies are the UK, Canada and Australia's response to the war in Afghanistan and the war in Iraq during the period of 2001 to 2003.;Keywords: International relations, international security, military cooperation, military alliances, foreign and defence policy, military intervention;The argument builds on three central claims. First, power asymmetries between allies translate into different assessments of international threats. Second, when disagreements over threats arise, the outcome of intra-alliance bargaining is not necessarily dictated by the preferences of the stronger power. Third, secondary states, as opposed to the dominant partner, face unique constraints when facing major foreign policy decisions, i.e. they face a trade-off between establishing a credible reputation as an alliance partner in a politically feasible way while minimizing domestic audience costs.
机译:本文主要研究美国与其盟国之间的军事合作。它认为,联盟的期望决定了军事合作的水平,而两个干预变量-政府凝聚力的水平和军事能力-决定了其实施。这项研究还表明,次要国家如何通过双边让步,国际组织和诉诸原则来部署战略以克服权力不对称。该研究的重点是特殊的盟友,因为他们与美国的计划并驾齐驱,会收获最多或遭受损失。我的观点是,次要盟友很少能决定性地影响主导盟国,但它们可以自主行动并抵抗强大的盟国伙伴施加的压力。为了研究不对称军事合作带来的理论难题,我介绍了一个基于此的因果解释新古典现实主义,以探讨系统变量和家庭变量之间的相互作用。我的研究通过研究特殊盟国在威胁时期如何响应美国的决策以及如何通过州级变量传递系统性约束,为联盟理论和外交政策决策做出了贡献;研究威胁感知与联盟之间的因果关系由于期望和国内限制因素,本研究依赖于结构化的重点比较方法和三个详细的案例研究。重点是特别盟友就是否参加与美国的联合动员作出的初步决定。决策过程是从次要盟国的角度提出的,并衡量了促成军事合作决定的解释因素。案例研究是英国,加拿大和澳大利亚对2001年至2003年期间阿富汗战争和伊拉克战争的反应。关键词:国际关系,国际安全,军事合作,军事同盟,对外和国防政策,军事干预;论点建立在三个核心主张之上。首先,盟国之间的权力不对称转化为对国际威胁的不同评估。第二,当出现关于威胁的分歧时,内部联盟议价的结果并不一定由强国的偏好所决定。第三,次要国家与主要伙伴相比,在面对重大外交政策决定时面临独特的约束,即它们面临着在政治上可行的方式中以在政治上可行的方式建立可信的联盟伙伴声誉与最小化国内观众成本之间的权衡。

著录项

  • 作者单位

    Universite de Montreal (Canada).;

  • 授予单位 Universite de Montreal (Canada).;
  • 学科 Political Science International Relations.;Military Studies.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2010
  • 页码 295 p.
  • 总页数 295
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类 肿瘤学 ;
  • 关键词

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