The United States-Japan-China Triangle in the Post-Cold War Early Decades: A Case Study of Applied Political Science
Power and Insecurity
by Jalel Ben Haj Rehaiem
Bertrand Russell said: “There are two motives for reading a book; one, that you enjoy it; the other, that you can boast about it.”; both motives apply to “The United States-Japan-China Triangle in the post-Cold War Early Decades: A Case Study of Applied Political Science.” First, you enjoy reading this book because it relates to the precarious state of world affairs after the Cold War, particularly the increasingly rising tensions within this US-Japan-China troubled triangle over power and security calculations in the New World Order of Pax Americana. Second, you can boast about the manuscript, as it has transpired that it was ahead of its time because it did anticipate the three paths of the U.S. foreign policy trajectory in East Asia in the following decades after the end of the Cold War: China would have to be either engaged or contained, North Korea would need to be disarmed from any nuclear weaponry, and Russia ought to be reminded from time to time of the strong U.S. military presence in the region.
Dr. Lanouar Ben Hafsa
University of Paris-Sorbonne (Paris IV), France
Hegemony, strategic rivalry, animus belligerendi, animus dominandi, longitudinal analysis, extraterritoriality, power, security, international relations, Wanghia Treaty, Opium Wars, China, Taiwan, Japan, Meji Restoration, East Asia, negative security factor, ASEAN, North Korea, nuclear weapons, Theater Missile Defense (THAD), John Mearsheimer, Wang Guangya, Peter W. Rodman, Christopher R. Hill, Chalrmers Johnson, Ezra Vogel, Bruce Cumings, John K. Fairbank
See also
Bibliographic Information
Book Title
The United States-Japan-China Triangle in the Post-Cold War Early Decades: A Case Study of Applied Political Science
Book Subtitle
Power and Insecurity
ISBN
979-8-8819-0044-1
Edition
1st
Physical size
236mm x 160mm