Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Table of Contents
- List of Figures and Tables
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Introduction: The Elusive Nature of China–Russia Relations and the Need for Theory
- 2 The Ordinal Model of Strategic Alignment
- 3 Military Cooperation: Approaching Alliance
- 4 Alignment Incentives: The Three Balances
- 5 Robustness Check: Economy and Diplomacy
- 6 Comparative Mapping: US–India and China–Russia Alignments
- 7 Conclusion: Empirical Findings and Theoretical Implications
- Index
6 - Comparative Mapping: US–India and China–Russia Alignments
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 October 2022
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Table of Contents
- List of Figures and Tables
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Introduction: The Elusive Nature of China–Russia Relations and the Need for Theory
- 2 The Ordinal Model of Strategic Alignment
- 3 Military Cooperation: Approaching Alliance
- 4 Alignment Incentives: The Three Balances
- 5 Robustness Check: Economy and Diplomacy
- 6 Comparative Mapping: US–India and China–Russia Alignments
- 7 Conclusion: Empirical Findings and Theoretical Implications
- Index
Summary
Abstract
To better understand the extent of China–Russia alignment, it is useful to assess it in relative terms. This chapter applies the alignment criteria developed and tested in the previous chapters to US–India alignment. US– India alignment is a new development in the post-Cold War international politics formed in the context of rising China and believed to share certain features with China–Russia post-Cold War alignment. This makes it a useful reference point for assessing the relative depth of China–Russia strategic cooperation. The goal of the comparison is twofold. First, it aims to see how China–Russia alignment fares vis-à-vis US–India alignment and where it is ahead or behind. The second goal is to execute a plausibility probe for the developed framework by applying it to a new case of strategic cooperation.
Keywords: strategic alignment, China–Russia relations, US–India relations
The previous chapters have demonstrated that China–Russia strategic cooperation has progressed considerably and consistently since the end of the Cold War. However, if the evidence of growing strategic cooperation is presented without comparison, the depth of such cooperation risks appearing greater (or smaller) than it actually is. While the upward trend in China–Russia strategic cooperation is evident, assessing the level of that cooperation and the amount of its progress requires comparison. As shown below, the US–India alignment shares certain features with the China–Russia alignment. At the same time, both alignments have been the subjects of expert debates regarding their depth and sustainability, and there has been no systematic, theory-grounded assessment of US–India alignment explicitly applying an alignment framework.
The analytical framework offered in Chapter 2 provides the metrics for comparative mapping of different interstate relations along the stages of alignment formation, which facilitates understanding of those relations. At the same time, systematic application of that framework to the case of US–India alignment, besides its empirical value, is also significant from the standpoint of a plausibility probe (George & Bennett, 2005; Levy, 2008; Eckstein, 1991). Given the nature of the task, this chapter will explore the parameters of US–India alignment in a more abridged form, with the overarching goal of assessing the level of cooperation compared to the China–Russia case.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- China-Russia Strategic Alignment in International Politics , pp. 157 - 188Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2022