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Journal ArticleDOI

Preventing Enemy Coalitions: How Wedge Strategies Shape Power Politics

Timothy W. Crawford
- 18 Mar 2011 - 
- Vol. 35, Iss: 4, pp 155-189
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TLDR
The wedge strategies that are likely to have significant effects use selective accommodation (concessions, compensations, and other inducements) to detach and neutralize potential adversaries.
Abstract
States use wedge strategies to prevent hostile alliances from forming or to disperse those that have formed. These strategies can cause power alignments that are otherwise unlikely to occur, and thus have significant consequences for international politics. How do such strategies work and what conditions promote their success? The wedge strategies that are likely to have significant effects use selective accommodation—concessions, compensations, and other inducements—to detach and neutralize potential adversaries. These kinds of strategies play important roles in the statecraft of both defensive and offensive powers. Defenders use selective accommodation to balance against a primary threat by neutralizing lesser ones that might ally with it. Expansionists use selective accommodation to prevent or break up blocking coalitions, which isolates opposing states by inducing potential balancers to buck-pass, bandwagon, or hide. Two cases—Great Britain's defensive attempts to accommodate Italy in the late 1930s a...

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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.
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The Dynamics of Global Power Politics: A Framework for Analysis

TL;DR: In this article, the authors call for a research program focused on the dynamics of global power politics, rather than linking realpolitik to structural-realist theoretical frameworks or the putatively anarchical character of world politics, they treat power politics as an object of analysis in its own right.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Peace of Illusions: American Grand Strategy from 1940 to the Present

TL;DR: The Peace of Illusions: American Grand Strategy from 1940 to the present by Christopher Layne as discussed by the authors is a collection of influential articles on the history of the United States' foreign policy.

Protection States Trust?: Major Power Patronage, Nuclear Behavior, and Alliance Dynamics

TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose an alliance compensation theory to explain why some states that receive a nuclear security guarantee move towards, and sometimes back away from, nuclear weapons, and argue that allies become more likely to engage in nuclear behavior when they doubt the reliability of the security guarantees they receive from their major power patrons.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Intimate enemies: The politics of peacetime alliances

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present Intimate Enemies: The politics of peacetime alliances in the Middle East, Vol. 7, No. 1, pp. 156-193.
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The Illusion of Limited War: Chancellor Bethmann Hollweg's Calculated Risk, July 1914

TL;DR: The responsibility for the outbreak of World War I weighed heavily upon Imperial Germany's fifth Chancellor, Theobald von Bethmann Hollweg as mentioned in this paper, who confessed to the Liberal Conrad Haussmann during the struggle.
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America’s Middle East grand strategy after Iraq: the moment for offshore balancing has arrived

TL;DR: A number of leading realists now argue that the best strategy for the US is to extricate itself from Iraq, reduce its regional footprint, and adopt an offshore balancing strategy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Balancing, Stability, and War: The Mysterious Case of the Napoleonic International System

TL;DR: The threat to the stability of the international system was surely as great during the Napoleonic imperium as it was during the period of Soviet threat, 1945-1989 as discussed by the authors.