Offshore balancing is a strategic concept used in realist analysis in international relations. It describes a strategy in which a great power uses favored regional powers to check the rise of potentially-hostile powers. This strategy stands in contrast to the dominant grand strategy in the United States, liberal hegemony. Offshore balancing calls for a great power to withdraw from onshore positions and focus its offshore capabilities on the three key geopolitical regions of the world: Europe, the Persian Gulf, and Northeast Asia.
History
Christopher Layne[1] attributes the introduction of the term "offshore balancing" to himself in his 1997 article.[2] Several experts on strategy, such as John Mearsheimer,[3] Stephen Walt,[4] Robert Pape,[5] Andrew Latham,[6] Patrick Porter,[7] and Andrew Bacevich, have embraced the approach. They argue that offshore balancing has its historical roots in British grand strategy regarding Europe, which was eventually adopted and pursued by the United States and Japan at various points in their history.[8]
According to political scientist John Mearsheimer, in his University of Chicago "American Grand Strategy" class, offshore balancing was the strategy used by the United States in the 1930s and also in the 1980–1988 Iran–Iraq War. Mearsheimer argues that when the United States gave Lend-Lease aid to Britain in the 1940s, the United States engaged in offshore balancing by being the arsenal of democracy, not the fighter for it.
That is consistent with offshore balancing because the United States initially did not want to commit American lives to the European conflict. The United States supported the losing side (Iraq) in the Iran–Iraq War to prevent the development of a regional hegemon, which could ultimately threaten American influence. Furthermore, offshore balancing can seem like isolationism when a rough balance of power in international relations exists, which was the case in the 1930s. It was also the strategy used during the Cold War between the United States and Soviet Union.
Theory
The grand strategy of "offshore balancing" arguably permits a great power to maintain its power without the costs of large military deployments around the world. It can be seen as the informal-empire analogue to federalism in formal ones (for instance the proposal for the Imperial Federation in the late British Empire). Offshore balancing, as its name implies, is a grand strategy that can be pursued only by island states on the edges of Eurasia and by isolated great powers, such as the United States.
The strategy calls for such states to maintain a rough balance of power in the three key geopolitical regions of the world: Europe, the Persian Gulf, and Northeast Asia. The three regions are the focus, since Europe and Northeast Asia are the major industrial centers of the world, which contain all of the other great powers and the Persian Gulf for its importance to the global oil market. Outside of these regions, an offshore balancer should not worry about developments. Also, a state pursuing offshore balancing should first seek to pass the buck to local powers and intervene only if the threat is too great for the other powers in the region to handle.[9]
Notable thinkers associated with offshore balancing
See also
References
- ↑ Layne, Christopher (2012-04-26). "The End of Pax Americana: How Western Decline Became Inevitable". The Atlantic. Retrieved 2020-10-18.
- ↑ Layne, Christopher (1997). "From Preponderance to Offshore Balancing: America's Future Grand Strategy". International Security. 22 (1): 86–124. doi:10.1162/isec.22.1.86. ISSN 0162-2889. S2CID 57560143.
- ↑ Mearsheimer, John J. (2010-12-16). "Imperial by Design". The National Interest. Retrieved 2020-10-18.
- ↑ Mearsheimer, John J.; Walt, Stephen M. (2019-08-14). "The Case for Offshore Balancing". Foreign Affairs: America and the World. ISSN 0015-7120. Retrieved 2020-10-18.
- ↑ Pape, Robert Anthony (2012). Cutting the fuse : the explosion of global suicide terrorism and how to stop it. Feldman, James K. (James Kendrick), Chicago Project on Security and Terrorism. (Pbk. ed.). Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-64565-0. OCLC 793208206.
- ↑ Latham, Andrew (October 2021). "The U.S. Grand Strategy of Liberal Internationalism Is Dead".
- ↑ "Losing Struggle". Losing Struggle. Retrieved 2020-10-18.
- ↑ Kennan, George (2012). American Diplomacy Sixtieth-Anniversary Expanded Edition. Chicago and London: The University of Chicago Press. pp. xi–xvi.
- ↑ Mearsheimer, John J.; Walt, Stephen M. (2019-08-14). "The Case for Offshore Balancing". Foreign Affairs: America and the World. ISSN 0015-7120. Retrieved 2020-10-18.
Sources
- Christopher Layne (1997). "From Preponderance to Offshore Balancing: America's Future Grand Strategy". International Security.
- John J. Mearsheimer (December 2008). "A Return to Offshore Balancing". Newsweek.
- Stephen Walt (November 2011). "Offshore Balancing: An idea whose time has come". Foreign Policy.
- Zachary Keck (February 2014). "Stephen Walt is Not Obama's George Kennan". The Diplomat.
- Hal Brands (September 2015). "The Limits of Offshore Balancing". Strategic Studies Institute. Archived from the original on 2017-04-28.
- Mearsheimer, Walt (June 2016). "The Case for Offshore Balancing" (PDF). Foreign Affairs.
Further reading
Books
- Walt, Stephen (2018). The Hell of Good Intentions: America's Foreign Policy Elite and the Decline of U.S. Primacy ISBN 978-0374280031
- Walt, Stephen (2005). Taming American Power: The Global Response to U.S. Primacy ISBN 978-0393052039
- Mearsheimer, John (2014). The Tragedy of Great Power Politics, Chapter 6, The Offshore Balancers ISBN 978-0-393-34927-6
- Layne, Christopher (2007). The Peace of Illusions: American Grand Strategy from 1940 to the Present ISBN 978-0-393-34927-6
Articles
- Layne, Christopher (2002). Offshore Balancing Revisited (The Washington Quarterly, Spring 2002)