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ID124062
Title ProperDemocratization and alliance commitment
Other Title InformationUS democratizing allies during the Gulf war
LanguageENG
AuthorJung, Sung Chul
Publication2013.
Summary / Abstract (Note)This study aims to analyze the effects of democratic transition on alliance commitment, focusing on political leaders' types and civil-military relations. This work expects to find that democratizers are more likely to be faithful to their existing alliance partner when their political leaders are old elites who are reluctant to initiate drastic domestic reforms and when their political leaders try to reduce military's influence on domestic affairs. By tracing the process of three US allies' participation (or nonparticipation) in the US-led multinational coalition against Iraq during the Persian Gulf War period, this study explores whether and how the domestic conditions affect alliance policies. The case studies on South Korea, Turkey, and the Philippines provide some support for the nexus approach which links domestic circumstances to foreign conditions.
`In' analytical NoteArmed Forces and Society Vol. 39, No.4; Oct 2013: p.654-674
Journal SourceArmed Forces and Society Vol. 39, No.4; Oct 2013: p.654-674
Key WordsAlliance ;  Democratization ;  Civil - Military Relations ;  Gulf War ;  Civil – Military Relations


 
 
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