Preventing War in East Asia : A European action plan to strengthen deterrence Joris Teer [Recurso electrónico]
Tipo de material:
TextoSeries Special ReportDetalles de publicación: París : European Union Institute for Security Studies , 2024Descripción: 13 pTema(s): Recursos en línea: Resumen: Over the last half century East Asia has become the global economy’s manufacturing hub. Powerful trends have made a military conflict in East Asia, especially over Taiwan, more likely since 2016. The most important of these are China’s rapid military modernisation and increasing number of hostile acts under the threshold of war. To Beijing’s growing frustration, these have not improved the prospects for peaceful “reunification” with the island republic. Use of greater force, namely a maritime blockade or an invasion of Taiwan, would have a severe impact on the EU’s prosperity and security. The new EU team should put the bloc in the best possible position to help prevent military conflict in East Asia. This requires a mobilisation of the EU’s economic resources to complement the bedrock of deterrence in East Asia: the military commitments of the United States and its allies and partners in the region. This action plan outlines the steps the EU would have to take in order to – as effectively as possible – contribute to preventing military conflict by preparing for an economic one.
Recurso electrónico para descargar
| Imagen de cubierta | Tipo de ítem | Biblioteca actual | Biblioteca de origen | Colección | Ubicación en estantería | Signatura topográfica | Materiales especificados | Info Vol | URL | Copia número | Estado | Notas | Fecha de vencimiento | Código de barras | Reserva de ítems | Prioridad de la cola de reserva de ejemplar | Reservas para cursos | |
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| Biblioteca Central del Ministerio de la Presidencia Recurso electrónico | En línea | No para préstamo |
En la cubierta: Jul 2024
Bibliografía: p. 10-13
Over the last half century East Asia has become the global economy’s manufacturing hub. Powerful trends have made a military conflict in East Asia, especially over Taiwan, more likely since 2016. The most important of these are China’s rapid military modernisation and increasing number of hostile acts under the threshold of war. To Beijing’s growing frustration, these have not improved the prospects for peaceful “reunification” with the island republic. Use of greater force, namely a maritime blockade or an invasion of Taiwan, would have a severe impact on the EU’s prosperity and security. The new EU team should put the bloc in the best possible position to help prevent military conflict in East Asia. This requires a mobilisation of the EU’s economic resources to complement the bedrock of deterrence in East Asia: the military commitments of the United States and its allies and partners in the region. This action plan outlines the steps the EU would have to take in order to – as effectively as possible – contribute to preventing military conflict by preparing for an economic one.
