ALLIANCE THEORY: UNDERSTANDING TURKEY'S CHANGING ALLIANCE BEHAVIOR WITHIN NATO

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Authors
Rodriguez, Peter Sr.
Subjects
NATO
Turkey
alliance
alliance theory
alliance behavior
international relations
nationalism
S-400
security
defense
Erdogan
United States
strategy
foreign policy
foreign affairs
Syria
Russia
Middle East
Advisors
Gingeras, Ryan
Date of Issue
2020-06
Date
Publisher
Monterey, CA; Naval Postgraduate School
Language
Abstract
The current multipolar international system is fraught with uncertainty for states seeking security assurances. Alliances are tools of statecraft used to enhance the security of their members. Over the past seventy years, NATO has successfully achieved its raison d’être—collective defense. Yet, Turkey, a NATO ally since 1952, has increasingly diverged from its traditional alliance behavior. This has called into question Turkey’s future role in NATO. Why would Ankara forge an informal alliance with Moscow and purchase Russia’s S-400, knowing that it would jeopardize NATO’s security and undermine the Alliance’s cohesion? This thesis merges two complementary alliance theories with Turkish identity politics to explore the factors driving Turkey’s perplexing behavior. Turkey’s shifting alliance behavior is the result of increasing distrust between Turkey and the Alliance, structural changes to the international system, differing threat perceptions, and the Justice and Development Party's Ottoman Islamist ideology. These factors collided during the Syrian War as Turkey’s and the rest of the Alliance’s security interests misaligned. Consequently, NATO’s internal threat level surpassed its shared external threat level—severely eroding the Alliance’s cohesion and compelling Turkey to change its alliance behavior. Despite Ankara’s worrisome behavior, Turkey remains a vital NATO ally. Thus, the Alliance should seek to mend the rift, lest Turkey continue its divergent course.
Type
Thesis
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National Security Affairs (NSA)
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Distribution Statement
Approved for public release. distribution is unlimited
Rights
This publication is a work of the U.S. Government as defined in Title 17, United States Code, Section 101. Copyright protection is not available for this work in the United States.
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