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OUTSIDE POWERS (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   124536


Outside support for insurgent movements / Byman, Daniel   Journal Article
Byman, Daniel Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract When assessing insurgencies, understanding the role of transnational factors is vital. This article explores how outside powers support an insurgency, focusing on four types of actors: states, diasporas, refugees, and other insurgencies. It also examines the pitfalls and limits of outside support and assesses why such support is so hard to stop. The article concludes by offering implications for the conflict in Syria and discussing several policy implications with a particular emphasis on why outside support is hard to stop.
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2
ID:   113838


SEAFET and ASA / Tarling, Nicholas   Journal Article
Tarling, Nicholas Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract The opening paper gives an account - partly drawn from the archives of an outside state, New Zealand - of the ancestors of ASEAN: ASA and SEAFET. ASEAN developed a life of its own. Yet SEAFET and ASA give some hints of its aims and some indications of its methods: the need to restrict the intervention of major outside powers; and the need to avoid the dominance by one substantial regional power, but to allow it due influence. The paper suggests that a strong motive behind the early attempts at a regional association was an attempt to deal with the disparate size and power of one state, Indonesia. If - but only if - its urge to regional primacy could be moderated and accommodated would it be possible to diminish recourse to or opportunity for the intervention of outside powers.
Key Words ASEAN  Indonesia  ASA  Outside Powers  Regional Primacy 
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