Publication |
2010.
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Summary/Abstract |
This article examines the prospects for creating a security structure in East Asia. In the authors' opinion, the need for such an organization is now overwhelming in the region, one of the few in the world that is still without a permanently functioning forum on security issues. The work analyzes different ideas and proposals aimed at creating such a forum: taking advantage of Europe's experience, particularly that of the OSCE, or relying on the local institutions that are maturing within the region. The authors conclude that under certain conditions, the mechanism of the six-party negotiations to settle the nuclear problem on the Korean Peninsula could become the foundation for a security structure in East Asia.
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