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REGIONAL RIVALRIES (4) answer(s).
 
SrlItem
1
ID:   115396


Building blocks: Somalia at a crossroads / Woodside, Duncan; Calatayud, Jose Miguel   Journal Article
Woodside, Duncan Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
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2
ID:   117533


India can play a stabilizing role in the region / Gupta, Arvind   Journal Article
Gupta, Arvind Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
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3
ID:   131384


Introduction to the special issue: regional rivalries and order in East Asia / Kimura, Kan   Journal Article
Kimura, Kan Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract In recent years, East Asian countries have faced serious challenges with regard to regional security. The bilateral relationships between China and Japan, and Japan and South Korea, have become increasingly strained due to a variety of disagreements over key political issues, such as territorial claims. Some observers argue that China and Japan may become involved in a direct military confrontation in the near future over the Senkaku/Diaoyu Islands. The increasing levels of naval and aerial engagements between the two countries demonstrate that such arguments can no longer be seen as 'out of the question'. While two democracies in the region, Japan and South Korea, are both major alliance partners with the United States and share the key security concern of countering North Korea's nuclear and conventional provocations, the two have suffered deteriorating relations since 2012. For instance, the General Security of Military Information Agreement, which provided a mechanism through which Japan and South Korea could share military technology, was canceled in July 2012. Furthermore, the two states have been embroiled in an increasingly antagonistic territorial dispute over Takeshima/Dokdo Islands since President Lee Myung-bak's visit to the islands in August 2012.
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4
ID:   132510


NATO's problematic partnerships in the MENA region / Kjennerud, Erik Reichborn   Journal Article
Kjennerud, Erik Reichborn Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract This essay analyzes how the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) is likely to address the new security environment in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region. It investigates how factors internal and external to the alliance shape the possibilities and limits for its ambition to strengthen and develop its regional partnerships in order to enhance security and stability there. NATO's ambitions are likely to be hampered by competing priorities within the alliance, as the as the members are increasingly facing diverging interests and financial austerity as well as domestic political change and regional rivalries in the MENA region.
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