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Motin examines great powers’ reactions to the rise of new powers in bipolar international systems by exploring an understudied problem: the rarity of armed emergence after 1945.The book focuses on Egypt, Iraq, Syria, and Vietnam; the few minor powers that attempted to emerge as great powers through force during the Cold War. Geography and existing powers’ reactions are analyzed as the two key factors determining a nation’s attempts at territorial expansion to achieve power on the global political stage. This systematic investigation of previously overlooked cases has profound implications for the scholarship on the rise and fall of great powers.In a context where territorial conquest is returning worldwide, scholars studying international relations, international security, and strategic studies should find valuable insights in this realist take.
Dylan Motin is a visiting scholar at the Seoul National University Asia Center, South Korea. He is also a non-resident Kelly Fellow at the Pacific Forum and a non-resident research fellow at the ROK Forum for Nuclear Strategy. His research interests include balance-of-power theory, great power competition, and Korean affairs.
1. Where Did the Conquerors Go?2. Bipolarity and Armed Emergence3. Nasserian Egypt, 1952–19734. Baathist Syria, 1963–20055. Baathist Iraq, 1968–19916. Vietnam, 1975–19907. Conclusion