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ID148157
Title ProperBalance strikes back
Other Title Informationpower, perceptions, and ideology in Georgian foreign policy, 1992–2014
LanguageENG
AuthorOskanian, Kevork
Summary / Abstract (Note)Tbilisi’s recent foreign policy presents analysts working from a balance-of-power perspective with something of a puzzle: with Russia very much the regionally dominant power, against the predictions of structural-systemic theories, small state Georgia has ended up balancing against, rather than bandwagoning with, great power Moscow. As a result, domestic, ideological explanations that implausibly ignore or minimize interstate considerations of power have predominated in analyses of Tbilisi’s foreign policy. In response, this essay examines Georgia’s post-Soviet foreign policies from a neoclassical realist theoretical viewpoint, combining systemic, balance-of-power and domestic ideological factors: throughout the period under review, Tbilisi’s policies were thus due to ideologically conditioned perceptions of shifting power-political realities in its neighborhood, with an ideological adherence to liberal norms playing a particularly important role in distorting these perceptions during the Saakashvili administration. Through this combination of power and ideology, neoclassical realism ends up providing a more comprehensive and continuous account of Tbilisi’s shifting policies since 1992 than either domestic or alternative realist frameworks, like balance-of-threat theory, or omnibalancing; as an important implication, Georgia’s, and other former Soviet states’ continued pro-Western orientation will depend as much on their perceptions of the West’s continued commitment to regional power projection as on domestic ideological preferences.
`In' analytical NoteForeign Policy Analysis Vol. 12, No.4; Oct 2016: p.628-652
Journal SourceForeign Policy Analysis 2016-12 12, 4
Key WordsPower ;  Ideology ;  Perceptions ;  Georgian Foreign Policy ;  Balance Strikes Bac ;  1992–2014