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Journal ArticleDOI

NATO and the Persian Gulf: examining intra-alliance behavior

Charles A. Kupchan
- 01 Mar 1988 - 
- Vol. 42, Iss: 2, pp 317-346
TLDR
The authors examines the determinants of intra-alliance cooperation by focusing on a single case study: the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) attempts to deal with Persian Gulf security since 1979.
Abstract
This study examines the determinants of intra-alliance cooperation by focusing on a single case study: the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) attempts to deal with Persian Gulf security since 1979. It chronicles the evolution of NATO policy towards Southwest Asia, identifying examples of cooperative and noncooperative behavior. The essay then develops four hypotheses about intra-alliance behavior and uses them to examine the case study. The External Threat hypothesis suggests that alliance cohesion rises and falls with external threats to collective security. The Alliance Security Dilemma hypothesis proposes that cohesion is a function of the coercive potential of the alliance leader and its ability to exact cooperative behavior from its weaker partners. The Collective Action hypothesis suggests that alliance behavior is fundamentally a public goods problem. The Domestic Politics hypothesis asserts that alliance behavior is determined primarily by political and economic factors at the domestic level.The essay points to the overriding importance of American coercion in producing political cooperation within NATO on the out-of-area problem. It shows, however, that the economic components of alliance behavior are relatively insensitive to bargaining pressure and threat perceptions, and that European defense expenditures are determined largely by domestic factors. The article therefore illuminates the need to distinguish carefully between the political and economic components of alliance management. It suggests, however, that the different dynamics driving cooperation and discord are not a function of the issue-area per se, but of the scope and locus of its decision-making arena. While some issue-areas are largely the domain of foreign policy elites and lend themselves to oligarchic forms of decision making, others have a far more immediate impact on domestic politics and are therefore more influenced by pluralist factors.

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국제정치이론 = Theory of international politics

TL;DR: The seeker after the truth is not one who studies the writings of the ancients and, following his natural disposition, puts his trust in them, but rather, one who suspects his faith in them and questions what he gathers from them, the one who submits to argument and demonstration, and not to the sayings of a human being whose nature is fraught with all kinds of imperfection and deformation as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Concerts, Collective Security, and the Future of Europe

TL;DR: Kupchan et al. as discussed by the authors argue that many of the causes of war that produced conflict during the first half of the twentieth century have either been eliminated or substantially moderated.
Journal ArticleDOI

NATO's persistence after the cold war

TL;DR: In this article, international institutionalist theories are used to explain why the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) continues to exist after the cold war, contrary to neorealist expectations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Burden-sharing in the Persian Gulf War

TL;DR: In the wake of the cold war, the end of bipolarity promises more ad hoc coalitions, which will widen opportunities for research on alliance burden sharing beyond the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Perverse Institutionalism: NATO and the Greco-Turkish Conflict

TL;DR: The U.S. Senate overwhelmingly approved the expansion of the Atlantic alliance last year as mentioned in this paper, despite the fact that Russia is no longer in a position to reconquer its former empire.
References
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The Evolution of Cooperation

TL;DR: In this paper, a model based on the concept of an evolutionarily stable strategy in the context of the Prisoner's Dilemma game was developed for cooperation in organisms, and the results of a computer tournament showed how cooperation based on reciprocity can get started in an asocial world, can thrive while interacting with a wide range of other strategies, and can resist invasion once fully established.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Evolution of Cooperation

TL;DR: A model is developed based on the concept of an evolutionarily stable strategy in the context of the Prisoner's Dilemma game to show how cooperation based on reciprocity can get started in an asocial world, can thrive while interacting with a wide range of other strategies, and can resist invasion once fully established.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Origins of Alliances

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The origins of alliances