The International Spectator, Vol. 44, No. 4, December 2009
31/12/2009
Special cores on Obama, One Year On and The Sustainability of De Facto States
New Potential for US-India Relations under Obama Free
Recent Publications Free
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Issue
44/4
Opinions
Obama, One Year On
Obama's Foreign Policy: Bridging the Expectations-Capability Gap
Tom Farer
Barack Obama's first year should appear disappointing only to
persons blind to the constraints imposed by the Bush legacy, the
still reeling world economy, an intimidating agenda of domestic
problems, a polarised domestic politics, and at least temporarily
intractable opponents of the President's undoubted ambitions to
tame the Middle East and promote cooperation among the leading
states without jettisoning a commitment to liberal values. By
ordering an end to torture and moving to close Guantanamo, he has
signalled the restoration of moral restraint on the exercise of
American power and implicitly expressed belief in the efficacy of
soft power assets. Additionally, he has attempted to create
political space for change by pushing the conventional limits of
American presidential discourse. A decent start, but the hard part
lies ahead.
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Shucking Cold War Inertia in Russia-US Relations
Fyodor Lukyanov
Obama's declared approach of taking account of the views of other
countries, reliance on multilateral institutions and consensus
diplomacy will help to reshape Russian-US relations. The recent
dialogue on strategic offensive armaments could well be the spark
that will ignite the engine of Russian-American interaction on a
wide range of issues. It is increasingly clear, however, that
ideologies and nuclear arms will not be the driving forces of
world politics in the 21st century. Under these circumstances,
Russia can be either an opponent or a partner for Washington.
Previously, the main problem in their relationship was the US'
unwillingness to sacrifice any of its interests, even secondary
ones. A new Russian-US partnership could be built on the
similarities in their foreign policy priorities - their focus on
regional conflicts and the need for stability in Eurasia.
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New Potential for US-India Relations under Obama
Radha Kumar
Many in India feared that the burgeoning US-India relationship
would collapse under President Obama, but his policies so far have
alleviated these concerns. The US has not tried to mediate in
Kashmir, has gone ahead on the civil nuclear energy agreement, and
entered into a high-level strategic dialogue with India. The
biggest potential thorn in US-India relations could be the US
approach to Pakistan: Obama could be tempted to tolerate a
military-dominated Pakistan and, in order to enable a speedy exit
from Afghanistan, could seek a Chinese guarantee in Afghanistan
and (indirectly) Pakistan. This would have serious consequences
for India and would bring back bitter memories of US
instrumentalism in South Asia.
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Essays
The Sustainability of De Facto States
Forms of Normalisation in the Quest for De Facto Statehood
Eiki Berg and Raul Toomla
De facto states are political entities unable to achieve widespread
recognition of their sovereignty that therefore remain largely or
totally unrecognised by the international society of sovereign states.
Yet, recognition can vary to certain degrees. Instead of taking federal
schemes unconditionally for granted, the avenues open for current
de facto states to establish themselves in international society
have to be analysed first. Kosovo, Taiwan, North Cyprus, Abkhazia,
Transnistria, Nagorno-Karabakh and Somaliland have all received
some kind of recognition (negation, boycott, toleration or
quasi-recognition), securing their standing in the political,
economic and public spheres.
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Playing the Recognition Game: External Actors and De Facto States
Nina Caspersen
It is impossible to understand the creation and continued survival
of de facto states without reference to external actors.
External patrons provide vital support and the international
system constrains and shapes these aspiring states.
The relationship is, however, not one-sided, and these entities
are not merely puppets. In fact external dependence creates
significant dilemmas for de facto states: it undercuts their
de facto independence and contradicts their strategy for
gaining international recognition, thereby undermining their
long-term sustainability. The dilemmas facing de facto states
have been accentuated by the recent recognition of Kosovo,
Abkhazia and South Ossetia.
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On the Political Economy of Unrecognised State-building Projects
Daria Isachenko
As the case of Transnistria illustrates,
the politico-economic arrangements of de facto states are
marked by a tendency to sacrifice the economy to political objectives.
Despite non-recognition and limited local resources, these entities
manage to make use of their ambiguous status and external
support to sustain their claims to statehood. Yet, the priority of
these claims over economic development, as well as strategies of
survival in general can have unintended effects on unrecognised
state-building projects, such as the emergence of a spin-off
opposition or public disillusionment.
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The Role of Media in Conflict and their Influence on Securitisation
Rabea Hass
During conflicts, the media are often the only source of information
concerning the 'other' side and hence a weighty instrument
of opinion making in society. This leads to the central
question to what extent the media can contribute to
securitising (or desecuritising) issues in society.
In this article, examples from the Israeli media landscape
are compared with the theoretical approach of the securitisation
theory of the Copenhagen School.
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Italy in World Affairs
Italy and the Euro in the Global Economic Crisis
Erik Jones
As Italian policymakers argue about the best way to respond
to the global economic crisis, the importance of the euro
to Italian economic stability seems to have dropped out of the debate.
This is a problem for three reasons: it dulls the memory of
Italian efforts to get into the single currency in the
mid-to-late 1990s; it allows critics of the euro to shape
perceptions of how eurozone membership affected Italy during
the past decade; and it obscures the trade-offs that Italians
would face if they were to make different choices in the future –
including the choice to leave. As a result, while it has been
relatively easy to argue that Italian politicians would have
to be crazy to try to take Italy out of the euro, it may become
more difficult to make that case with the same level of
confidence as time goes on. Italian perceptions of the merits
of being in the euro are changing and the real possibilities
available to Italian policymakers are changing as a result.
Italy will pay a high price for opening up the possibility
of leaving the eurozone whether or not Italian policymakers
are serious about taking that step.
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Book Reviews
Power, Paradise and Fantasy
Domènec Ruiz Devesa
Review of:
Follies of power, David P. Calleo, Cambridge University Press, 2009
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Europe in the Neighbourhood: Still More Noise than Action?
Thorfinn Stainforth
Review of:
Neighborhood challenge, edited by Bezen Balamir-Coskun,
Birgül Demirtas-Coskun, Universal Publishers, 2008
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The Debate on Democracy Promotion after the Bush Era
Emiliano Alessandri
Review of:
The crisis of American foreign policy, G. John Ikenberry ... [et al.], Princeton University Press, 2009 ;
The global commonwealth of citizens, Daniele Archibugi, Princeton University Press, 2009 ;
Global democracy; for and against, Raffaele Marchetti, Routledge, 2009
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