American grand strategy and East Asian security in the twenty-first century
Comprehensive East Asian security -- The size of the fight in the dog : costly signals in international bargaining -- No arms race : military expenditures in East Asia and Latin America -- North Korea : going down swinging -- South Korea : an independent grand strategy -- The Philippines : cheap tal...
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Format: | UnknownFormat |
Sprache: | eng |
Veröffentlicht: |
Cambridge, New York, NY
Cambridge University Press
2017
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Schlagworte: |
Security, International
> Kollektive Sicherheit
> Sicherheitspolitik
> Militärische Kooperation
> Internationale Politik
> Politischer Wandel
> Internationales politisches System
> Strategie
> Außenpolitik
> Konzeption
> Regionalpolitik
> East Asia
> Foreign relations
> United States
> Military relations
> Ostasien
> USA
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Zusammenfassung: | Comprehensive East Asian security -- The size of the fight in the dog : costly signals in international bargaining -- No arms race : military expenditures in East Asia and Latin America -- North Korea : going down swinging -- South Korea : an independent grand strategy -- The Philippines : cheap talk about a free ride -- Vietnam : who's chasing whom in Vietnam-U.S. relations -- Comprehensive security in Japan, Indonesia, Singapore, and Australia -- Powerful patron : America's changing relations with East Asia -- A minimalist American grand strategy towards Asia East Asia is richer, more integrated and more stable than ever before, whilst East Asian defense spending is now roughly half of what it was in 1990 and shows no sign of increasing. There is no evidence of any Asian arms race. All countries in the region are seeking diplomatic, not military solutions with each other. Yet this East Asia reality still runs counter to a largely Western narrative that views China's rise as a threat and the region as increasingly unstable. In this important book, David C. Kang argues that American grand strategy should emphasize diplomatic and economic relations with the region, rather than military-first policies. Using longitudinal and comparative data, statistical analysis, and intensive research in selected East Asian countries, he suggests that East Asia is in sync with the American desire to share burdens and that the region may in fact be more stable than popularly believed. |
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Beschreibung: | Literaturhinweise, Register |
Beschreibung: | xv, 212 Seiten Diagramme |
ISBN: | 9781316616406 978-1-316-61640-6 9781107167230 978-1-107-16723-0 |