Testing theories of alliance formation: the case of Southwest Asia
- 1 January 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in International Organization
- Vol. 42 (2), 275-316
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0020818300032823
Abstract
The question “what causes alignment?” remains a basic issue in international relations theory. Moreover, competing hypotheses about alliance formation underlie many recurring policy debates. Balance-of-power theory predicts states will ally to oppose the strongest state; the “bandwagoning hypothesis” predicts that alignmentwiththe stronger side is more likely. These two hypotheses are usually framed solely in terms of the distribution of capabilities (that is, the balance ofpower), which neglects several other important factors and leads to faulty predictions about alliance choices. A careful examination of the alliance policies of Iran, Turkey, India, and Pakistan reveals that “balance-of-threat theory” provides a better explanation of alliance choices than these other conceptions. This theory predicts that states balance against the mostthreateningstate, rather than the most powerful. Threats are a function of power, geographic proximity, offensive capability, and perceived intentions. Thus, balance-of-threat theory is an important refinement of structural balance- of-power theory.Keywords
This publication has 38 references indexed in Scilit:
- The agent-structure problem in international relations theoryInternational Organization, 1987
- Iran's Quest for Superpower StatusForeign Affairs, 1987
- Europe without America: The Erosion of NATOForeign Affairs, 1985
- Pakistan's Search for a Foreign Policy After the Invasion of AfghanistanPacific Affairs, 1984
- Letter to the editorInternational Organization, 1982
- The Tilt Policy Revisited: Nixon-Kissinger Geopolitics and South AsiaAsian Survey, 1980
- Deconstructing Methodological Falsificationism in International RelationsAmerican Political Science Review, 1980
- Containment in Iran, 1946: The Shift to an Active PolicyDiplomatic History, 1977
- China's Relations with Pakistan: Durability Amidst DiscontinuityThe China Quarterly, 1975
- The Indo-Soviet MIG Deal and Its International RepercussionsAsian Survey, 1964