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Explaining NATO enlargement: international relations theories and the dynamics of domestics politics in Russia and the United States
This article focuses on NATO's expansion after the Cold War. Neorealist, neoliberal, and constructivist approaches and their failures in explaining the causes of NATO's expansion are highlighted. The timing and the nature of NATO's expansion are much better explained by the concatenat...
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Published in: | Uluslararasi Iliskiler / International Relations 2012-07, Vol.9 (34), p.73-98 |
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Main Author: | |
Format: | Article |
Language: | Turkish |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | This article focuses on NATO's expansion after the Cold War. Neorealist, neoliberal, and constructivist approaches and their failures in explaining the causes of NATO's expansion are highlighted. The timing and the nature of NATO's expansion are much better explained by the concatenation of specific domestic political dynamics in the United States and Russia. In the United States, the rise of the Republicans who captured the Congress in 1994 and the presidency in 2000 provided the impetus for NATO's expansion, along with the influence of what the current author calls the `East European Lobby' in U.S. politics. In Russia, the strength of the Communists and the ultranationalists in the Duma, and the rise of the siloviki, cadres with a military-security background, to positions of executive power, was of decisive importance in the polarization of Russian-American relations, which motivated further NATO expansions. |
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ISSN: | 1304-7310 1304-7310 |