Restraining Rivalries? US Alliance Policy and the Challenges of Regional Security in the Middle East and East Asia

Date

2016

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Royal Irish Academy

Abstract

Barack Obama’s US presidency clearly signalled that America aims to re-order its foreign policy preferences to emphasise Asia. This article examines the challenges for US alliance management in the Middle East and East Asia, the two regions that have encountered the sharpest turnaround in terms of the US strategic attention received, as measured by the past decade. The threat of regional rivalries, linked to wider nuclear proliferation, lingers over both these regions. In addressing the Middle East, this article will focus on the problematic US-Saudi alliance; this arrangement represents a fragile regional linchpin, preventing further nuclear proliferation and regional destabilisation. By comparison, East Asia is a far more stable security order. However, it is argued that the US will continue to face a difficult balancing act between its accommodation of China’s ‘peaceful rise’ and the credible assurance of its nervous allies: Japan, Taiwan and South Korea.

Description

Keywords

Military strategy, US, China, Japan, North Korea, Iran, Saudi Arabia, international alliances, alliances, nuclear weapons, military alliances, regional security, nuclear deterrence, International security, rivalry, sõjaline strateegia, USA/Ameerika Ühendriigid, Hiina, rivaliteet, Jaapan, Põhja-Korea, Iraan, Saudi Araabia, rahvusvahelised alliansid, liitlased, tuumarelvad, sõjalised liidud, regionaalne julgeolek, tuumaheidutus, rahvusvaheline julgeolek

Citation