Following the Leader: International Order, Alliance Strategies, and Emulation
Nations have powerful reasons to get their military alliances right. When security pacts go well, they underpin regional and global order; when they fail, they spread wars across continents as states are dragged into conflict. We would, therefore, expect states to carefully tailor their military par...
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Zusammenfassung: | Nations have powerful reasons to get their military alliances
right. When security pacts go well, they underpin regional and
global order; when they fail, they spread wars across continents as
states are dragged into conflict. We would, therefore, expect
states to carefully tailor their military partnerships to specific
conditions. This expectation, Raymond C. Kuo argues, is wrong.
Following the Leader argues that most countries ignore
their individual security interests in military pacts, instead
converging on a single, dominant alliance strategy. The book
introduces a new social theory of strategic diffusion and
emulation, using case studies and advanced statistical analysis of
alliances from 1815 to 2003. In the wake of each major war that
shatters the international system, a new hegemon creates a core
military partnership to target its greatest enemy. Secondary and
peripheral countries rush to emulate this alliance, illustrating
their credibility and prestige by mimicking the dominant form.
Be it the NATO model that seems so commonsense today, or the
realpolitik that reigned in Europe of the late nineteenth
century, a lone alliance strategy has defined broad swaths of
diplomatic history. It is not states' own security interests
driving this phenomenon, Kuo shows, but their jockeying for status
in a world periodically remade by great powers. |
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