Arguing about Alliances: The Art of Agreement in Military-Pact Negotiations

Arguing about Alliances: The Art of Agreement in Military-Pact Negotiations

by Paul Poast
Arguing about Alliances: The Art of Agreement in Military-Pact Negotiations

Arguing about Alliances: The Art of Agreement in Military-Pact Negotiations

by Paul Poast

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Overview

Why do some attempts to conclude alliance treaties end in failure? From the inability of European powers to form an alliance that would stop Hitler in the 1930s, to the present inability of Ukraine to join NATO, states frequently attempt but fail to form alliance treaties. In Arguing about Alliances, Paul Poast sheds new light on the purpose of alliance treaties by recognizing that such treaties come from negotiations, and that negotiations can end in failure.

In a book that bridges Stephen Walt's Origins of Alliance and Glenn Snyder's Alliance Politics, two classic works on alliances, Poast identifies two conditions that result in non-agreement: major incompatibilities in the internal war plans of the participants, and attractive alternatives to a negotiated agreement for various parties to the negotiations. As a result, Arguing about Alliances focuses on a group of states largely ignored by scholars: states that have attempted to form alliance treaties but failed. Poast suggests that to explain the outcomes of negotiations, specifically how they can end without agreement, we must pay particular attention to the wartime planning and coordinating functions of alliance treaties. Through his exploration of the outcomes of negotiations from European alliance negotiations between 1815 and 1945, Poast offers a typology of alliance treaty negotiations and establishes what conditions are most likely to stymie the attempt to formalize recognition of common national interests.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781501740244
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Publication date: 11/15/2019
Pages: 258
Sales rank: 480,766
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 1.00(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Paul Poast is Associate Professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of Chicago. He is author of The Economics of War and co-author of Organizing Democracy. Follow him on X @ProfPaulPoast.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction: The Fragility of Alliance Diplomacy
1. A Theory of Alliance Treaty Negotiation Outcome
2. Measuring War Planning and Negotiation Outcomes
3. Analyzing Alliance Treaty Negotiation Outcome
4. A Key Nonagreement: The 1901 Anglo-German Negotiations
5. An Important Agreement: The 1948–49 North Atlantic Treaty Negotiations
Conclusion: Negotiations and the Future of Alliance Studies
Notes
Bibliography
Index

What People are Saying About This

Douglas M. Gibler

Paul Poast shows how the study of international alliances and international conflict more generally can benefit from understanding when states fail to agree on alliance. Poast's work is exemplary.

Mark J.C. Crescenzi

Arguing about Alliances makes an essential argument for the need to understand the context within which alliances are negotiated, and moves the literature forward.

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