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ID190074
Title ProperBilateral Alliances in an Interconnected Cyber World
Other Title InformationCyber Deterrence and Operational Control in the US Indo-Pacific Strategy
LanguageENG
AuthorPlatte, James E
Summary / Abstract (Note)During the Cold War, US extended deterrence commitments mostly focused on deterring nuclear or strategic conventional attacks against allies in Europe and Asia. In the decades following the end of the Cold War in the early 1990s, the emergence of new technologies and domains for conflict, particularly the cyber domain, prompted new thinking for alliance management and extended deterrence. In this article I explore how the system of US bilateral alliances and informal strategic groupings in the Indo-Pacific affects the crafting of allied cyber deterrence strategies in the region. Based on deterrence and alliance theory, I survey cyber threats faced by US allies and partners in the region and views of cyber deterrence to form a general framework of allied cyber deterrence strategy. The US-South Korea alliance is used as a case study for allied cyber deterrence strategy, with a special focus on the impact that South Korea assuming wartime operational control of allied military forces could have on cyber deterrence on the Korean Peninsula. Just as concepts of extended deterrence had to evolve, the cyber domain will force the United States and allies to reconceptualize peacetime and wartime operational control.
`In' analytical NoteAsian Perspectives Vol. 47, No.1; Winter 2023: p.75-100
Journal SourceAsian Perspectives Vol: 47 No 1
Key WordsEast Asia Security ;  Cyberspace ;  Cyber Deterrence ;  Operational Control ;  Indo-Pacific ;  US-ROK Alliance


 
 
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