The Indian Ocean: Regional and International Power Politics |
Contents
Chapter | 1 |
THE AMERICAN APPROACH TO WORLD POWER | 57 |
THE SOVIET APPROACH TO WORLD POWER | 87 |
Copyright | |
7 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
accommodation achieve Afghanistan Africa alliance Angola areas arms control arms race Asia attitude balance behavior bloc bureaucratic China cold cold war communications competing competition consequence countries create crises crisis management cultural debate decisionmaking defined detente diplomacy diplomatic disarmament distribution domestic East-West economic elite emergence enemy established Europe European existence external factor global Ibid ideological impact implies Indian Ocean world influence instability interests international environment international power international relations international security international system intervention ment Middle East middle powers military force military power mobilize national security neocolonial nomic nonaligned movement nonalignment norms North North/South nuclear organization organizational Pakistan peace power politics power structures quest regime regional international relations regional power relationship seek sense social society South South Asia Southeast Asia southern southern strategy Soviet Union strategic buffers subnational super superpowers territorial third world threat tion U.S. foreign policy U.S. military United York zones