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ID159149
Title ProperTangled up in rose? Theories of alliance entrapment and the 2008 Russo-Georgian War
LanguageENG
AuthorLanoszka, Alexander
Summary / Abstract (Note)Recent tensions between Russia and the United States have sparked debate over the value of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). One controversy surrounds the extent to which NATO raises the risk of war through entrapmentā€”a concept that scholars invoke to describe how states might drag their allies into undesirable military conflicts. Yet scholars have advanced different, even conflicting arguments about how entrapment risks arise. I offer a typology that distinguishes between the mechanisms through which entrapment risks allegedly emerge on the basis of their institutional, systemic, reputational, and transnational ideological sources. I use the 2008 Russo-Georgian War to illustrate how the purported mechanisms of entrapment fare in elucidating that conflict. In analyzing why entrapment risks emerge, and thinking counterfactually about The 2008 War, I argue that scholars need to disentangle the various mechanisms that drive both alliance formation and war to make sure that entrapment risks do indeed exist.
`In' analytical NoteContemporary Security Policy Vol. 39, No.2; Apr 2018: p.234-257
Journal SourceContemporary Security Policy Vol: 39 No 2
Key WordsNATO ;  War ;  Alliance ;  Russia ;  Caucasus ;  Entrapment


 
 
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