Russia;
China;
USA;
Balance of power;
Balance of threat;
Preventive war;
Power transition;
Alliances;
WAR;
PACIFIC;
FUTURE;
COMMITMENT;
TRANSITION;
STABILITY;
DEMOCRACY;
TIMES;
RISE;
D O I:
10.1057/s41311-020-00225-9
中图分类号:
D81 [国际关系];
学科分类号:
030207 ;
摘要:
How should alliance patterns respond to changing relative power? If states ally against the greatest threat, they should switch alliances if a shift in relative power makes a new state more threatening than the previous adversary. For some states, a "threat transition" will occur when the risk of a preventive war from the declining state falls below the risk of a revisionist war from the rising state, prompting a switch from the rising to the declining state. Such a threat transition may occur before, after or even in the absence of a power transition, in which the second-ranked state overtakes the most powerful state in the system. I present a model of alliance choice over time with changing relative power that develops the dynamic balance of threat perspective. I then discuss US-Chinese-Russian relations as an illustration of the model.
机构:
Institute of World Economics and Politics,Chinese Academy of Social SciencesInstitute of World Economics and Politics,Chinese Academy of Social Sciences
机构:
Univ Denver, Josef Korbel Sch Int Studies, Ctr China US Cooperat, Denver, CO 80208 USAUniv Denver, Josef Korbel Sch Int Studies, Ctr China US Cooperat, Denver, CO 80208 USA