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MCKINNEY, JARED MORGAN (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   170456


How to avoid a contest for supremacy in East Asia / McKinney, Jared Morgan   Journal Article
McKinney, Jared Morgan Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This article challenges the increasingly dominant narrative of an inevitable quest for supremacy in contemporary East Asia. It argues that the narrative rests on a foundation of power transition theory that is conceptually and historically flawed, and that it risks an unnecessary war. The article contends that strategists should instead start thinking about constructing a system in which power and privileges in East Asia are held in equilibrium in a manner conceptually similar to the associative balance/shared hegemony of the Long Nineteenth Century. In such a system, Asia would not be “America’s,” but neither would it be “China’s.”
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2
ID:   161358


Nothing fails like success: : the London Ambassadors’ Conference and the coming of the First World War / McKinney, Jared Morgan   Journal Article
McKinney, Jared Morgan Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract During the July Crisis Britain’s foreign secretary, Sir Edward Grey, focused on organising a conference through which differences could be reconciled. After the war, he maintained that Germany’s unwillingness to join this conference was one of the immediate causes of war. This essay disputes Grey’s contention, arguing that his plans for a conference, based on a misleading analogy to the previous Balkan Crises, actually helped facilitate the outbreak of war in 1914 by sanctioning inaction in the first phase of the crisis (28 June–22 July) and by tacitly encouraging Russian mobilisation in the second phase (23 July–4 August).
Key Words Causes of war  Balkan Wars  WWI  Analogical Reasoning  Sir Edward Grey 
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