1st Edition

US Allies in a Changing World

Edited By Barry Rubin, Thomas A. Keaney Copyright 2001
310 Pages
by Routledge

310 Pages
by Routledge

First published in 2001, US Allies in a Changing World explores the development of the United States' alliances from the American perspective, as well as from that of its most important allies—Britain, Germany, the Gulf States, Israel, Turkey, Australia, Japan, South Korea and Taiwan. The book considers how these relationships changed in the tumultuous international environment of the past... Read more

Part 1: American Perspectives

1. The United States and its Allies: A Historical Perspective
Thomas A. Keaney

2. Post-Cold War Allies: The Illusion of Unipolarity
Ted Hopf

3. US Military Capabilities in the Post-Cold War Era: Implications for Middle East Allies
Michael Eisenstadt

Part 2: Europe

4. The Anglo-American Defense Partnership
Christopher Coker

5. Perspectives on German Security and Defense Policy
Karl-Heinz Kamp

Part 3: Middle East

6. Turkey and the United States: Ambivalent Allies
Kernal Kirsci

7. The United States and the Gulf States: An Alliance in Need
Joseph Kostiner

8. Israel and the United States: Can the Special Relationship Survive the New Strategic Environment?
Gerald M. Steinberg

Part 4: Asia

9. The Japan–US Alliance: A Key to the Peace and Stability of the Asia Pacific Region
Toshiyuki Shikata

10. The Changing ROK–US Alliance: From Containment to Cooperative Engagement
Yong-Sup Han

11. From Strategic Ambiguity to ‘Three No’s’: The Changing Nature of US Policy toward Taiwan
Philip Y.M. Yang

12. The US–Australian Alliance
Desmond Ball

Biography

Barry Rubin was a well-known expert on terrorism and Middle East affairs. He was director of the Global Research for International Affairs (GLORIA) Center at the Herzliya Interdisciplinary Center. He also served as editor of both the Middle East Review of International Affairs (MERIA) Journal and the Turkish Studies journal.

Thomas A. Keaney is senior fellow at the Philip Merrill Center for Strategic Studies and a senior adjunct professor of strategic studies at Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS). Until June 2017, he was the Associate Director of Strategic Studies at the school. Before coming to SAIS in 1998, he was for ten years a professor of military strategy at National War College, Washington DC, and director of its core courses on military thought and strategy.