Breadcrumbs navigation
Better safe than sorry: Why great powers accommodate high-value hedgers
In this short video extract, the author discusses the key arguments from their new Review of International Studies article - Better safe than sorry: Why great powers accommodate high-value hedgers
Want to know more? You can read the full article at DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0260210524000652
Abstract
Despite the growing interest in secondary state efforts to avoid choosing sides in great power competition, International Relations scholars have paid scant attention to the question of how great powers respond to secondary state ‘hedging’. We offer a first approximation for this important question by focusing on ‘high-value’ hedgers, i.e. secondary states whose location or capabilities afford them the potential to tip the scales in a great power war. We posit that great powers are likely to accommodate high-value hedgers and refrain from trying to manipulate their alignment choice. This is because the likelihood and costs of losing a high-value hedger are such that competing great powers would rather be safe than sorry. Concretely, we expect established and rising great powers to (re)assure high-value hedgers: the former by demonstrating their commitment to a regional balance of power, and the latter by showing they harbour no ill intent towards the hedging secondary state. To probe our argument, we examine how Great Britain and Germany responded to Dutch hedging in the early 20th century, and how the United States and China are responding to Singapore’s hedging today.
Photo by Christian Lue on Unsplash