查詢結果分析
相關文獻
- The Changing Balance of Power in East Asia: Implications for Regional and International Security
- 海線交通對東亞區域安全之影響
- 東亞區域安全局勢之形成--從韓戰發生的原因談起
- Australian Approaches to Regional Security: Implications for Australia-Taiwan Relations
- From Military Insecurity to Human Security: An Assessment of East Asian Security Environment
- 美國重返東亞及其對區域安全之影響
- 東海和平倡議的挑戰與機會
- 臺灣提出「和平案」對參與聯合國與區域安全之影響
- 國際安全研究中的區域主義:理論與發展簡介與評估
- 2015年東亞區域安全形勢現狀與我國應有的戰略思考
頁籤選單縮合
題 名 | The Changing Balance of Power in East Asia: Implications for Regional and International Security |
---|---|
作 者 | Huxley,Tim; | 書刊名 | Issues & Studies |
卷 期 | 34:11/12 民87.11-12 |
頁 次 | 頁90-120 |
分類號 | 578.193 |
關鍵詞 | 東亞; 區域安全; 國際安全; East Asia; United States; Europe; Security; Defence; |
語 文 | 英文(English) |
英文摘要 | Despite claims that regional institutions and economic interdependence are playing increasingly important roles in maintaining peace in East Asia. The regional security landscape is still molded to a large extent by halance-of-power thinking and practice, in which relative military power is a central consideration. This paper assesses; (1) the changing distribution of military power in East Asia in terms of the evolving roles of extraregional players (the United States, Russia, and West European states) as well as the growing military capabilities of the regional states themselves; and < 2) the strategic implications of this changing military balance for the region, the United States, and Europe. This paper argues that the key factor preventing the degeneration of rivalry between East Asian states into more naked military competition is and will remain the regional military commitment of the United States, which helps to constrain not onlv China's presumed hegemonic ambitions but also large-scale Japanese rearmament. Recent U.S. regional security policy has focused on reinforcing the stability of the regional balance, most importantly by bolstering key alliance relationships in the region (particularly with Japan and Australia). However, the balance envisaged in Washington does not rest solely on calculations of relative power: the United States has simultaneously attempted to engage China and has supported regional confidence-building dialogues. The present balance, underpinned by the U.S. regional security role, serves the interests of European states well. While responsibility for reinforcing the stability of this balance must rest primarily with the United States. Japan, and other regional slates. West European governments can contribute to East Asia's "soft security. "Moreover, by becoming more self-reliant in their own defence and perhaps by contributing forces in support of the U.S. regional role. They can also contribute to the region's "hard security" as well. West European governments, though, might find such "Olif-oJ-urea" commilmenis hard fo justify' to domestic political conslitllencies. |
本系統中英文摘要資訊取自各篇刊載內容。