Strategic Triangles Reshaping International Relations in East Asia
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Abstract
Rozman shows how East Asia’s international relations over three decades can be best understood through the lens of triangles, analyzing relations between the key nations through a series of trilateral relationships. He argues that triangles present a convincing answer to the question of whether we had entered a new era of bipolarity like the Cold War or an age of multipolarity. Triangulation emerged as a dynamic in East Asia in the aftermath of the Cold War and was accelerated in the course of the Xi and Trump administrations. Even as Sino-US competition and confrontation deepened, triangles had a substantial presence. East Asian triangles share an unusual mixture of three distinct elements: deep-seated security distrust, extraordinary economic interdependence, and a combustible composition of historical resentments and civilizational confidence. The combination of the three makes the case for triangularity more compelling, Rozman argues. The legacy of communism, the pursuit of reunification on the Korean Peninsula, and moves to expand beyond the US-Japan alliance have all driven the way triangles have evolved. Only as bipolarity intensified in the 2020s was triangularity losing ground. The degree of turnabout is analyzed for all of the cases considered. Rozman evaluates each key triangle of states in turn and assesses how the relationship impacts the region more widely. This book provides an essential framework for understanding the current state and trajectory of East Asian international relations, for students and policymakers. The Open Access version of this book, available at www.taylorfrancis.com, has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives 4.0 license.
Keywords
China; Cold War; Indo-Pacific; the Quad; Russia; India; USA; Korea; Japan; Australia; THAAD Deployment; Wolf Warrior; West Germany; Managing North Korea; Sino ROK Relation; Japan ROK Relation; North’s Nuclear Weapons Program; Identity Gaps; United States; Sino DPRK Relation; Nontraditional Security; UN; Sino Japanese Relations; North Korean; Sino South Korean Relations; Comfort Women; North Korea’s Nuclear Threat; ASEAN Centrality; Triangular Dynamics; South KoreansDOI
10.4324/9781003296256ISBN
9781000613957, 9781003296256, 9781032283135, 9781000613995, 9781032283128, 9781000613957OCN
1310786916Publisher
Taylor & FrancisPublisher website
https://taylorandfrancis.com/Publication date and place
Oxford, 2022Grantor
Imprint
RoutledgeSeries
Politics in Asia,Classification
International relations
Political economy
Regional / International studies