Alliance

An alliance is a relationship among people, groups, or states that have joined together for mutual benefit or to achieve some common purpose, whether or not an explicit agreement has been worked out among them.

Alliances form in many settings, including political alliances, military alliances, and business alliances. When the term is used in the context of war or armed struggle, such associations may also be called allied powers, especially when discussing World War I or World War II.

Alliance
Allies Day, May 1917, National Gallery of Art
Alliance
Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery decorates Soviet Marshals and generals at the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin, 12 July 1945.

A formal military alliance is not required for being perceived as an ally—co-belligerence, fighting alongside someone, is enough. According to this usage, allies become so not when concluding an alliance treaty but when struck by war.

When spelled with a capital "A", "Allies" usually denotes the countries who fought together against the Central Powers in World War I (the Allies of World War I), or those who fought against the Axis Powers in World War II (the Allies of World War II). The term has also been used by the United States Army to describe the countries that gave assistance to South Vietnam during the Vietnam War.

The Allied Powers in World War I (also known as the Entente Powers) were initially the United Kingdom, France, the Russian Empire, Belgium, Serbia, Montenegro and Japan, joined later by Italy, Portugal, Romania, the United States, Greece and Brazil. Some, such as the Russian Empire, withdrew from the war before the armistice due to revolution or defeat.

After the end of World War II and during the Cold War, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) was formed as a political and military alliance that promotes anti-communist values.

More recently, the term "Allied forces" has also been used to describe the coalition of the Gulf War, as opposed to forces the Multi-National Forces in Iraq which are commonly referred to as "Coalition forces" or, as by the George W. Bush administration, "the coalition of the willing".

Effects

Scholars are divided as to the impact of alliances. Several studies find that defensive alliances deter conflict. One study questions these findings, showing that alliance commitments deterred conflict in the prenuclear era but has no statistically meaningful impact on war in the postnuclear era. Another study finds that while alliance commitments deter conflict between sides with a recent history of conflict, alliances tend to provoke conflicts between states without such a history.

A 2000 study in the Journal of Conflict Resolution found that allies fulfill their alliance commitments approximately 75% of the time. Most research suggests that democracies are more reliable allies than non-democracies. A 2004 study did however question whether alliance commitments by democracies are more durable. A 2018 study updated and extended the data from the 2000 Journal of Conflict Resolution study and found that allies only fulfill their commitments about 50% of the time from 1816 to 2003. According to the study, "States honored their alliance commitments 66% of the time prior to 1945 but the compliance rate drops to 22% from 1945 to 2003. Moreover, the rates of fulfillment for defense pacts (41%) and nonaggression pacts (37%) are dramatically lower than offensive alliances (74%) and neutrality agreements (78%)."

One of the most profound effects of alliances can be seen in technological innovation, due to conduits of knowledge flows that are open between allies but closed between rivals.

International opinion

Alliance 
Map indicating international preferences for principal ally in the case a country were attacked, as of 2017.

According to a 2017 poll by WIN/GIA, the United States was the most preferred ally internationally. Russia and China, who preferred one another, both trailed America globally. Four countries, Bulgaria, Greece, Slovenia and Turkey, preferred Russia, despite being members of NATO.

In Pakistan, 72% of respondents preferred ties to China, the largest margin of any country surveyed, while 46% of Bangladesh preferred India. A total of 22 countries indicated a preference for the United Kingdom at a rate of 10% or more, but the United States was the only country to prefer Britain over any other, at a rate of 43%. Five countries preferred France at a rate of 10% or more, led by Belgium at a rate of 25%. A single country, Iraq, expressed no preference, while three other countries, Lebanon, Palestine, and Slovenia, expressed no preference at a rate of 11% or more, although at a smaller rate than their preference for Russia on the part of Lebanon and Slovenia, and China on the part of Palestine. Kosovo reported the most unified opinion, preferring the United States at a rate of 92%, while Russia's most unified supporters were Mongolia (71%), Armenia (67%) and Serbia (56%). In total, 21 countries expressed a preference for America at a rate of 50% or more.

Results of 2017 poll by WIN/GIA.
Most preferred ally in case of military threat
figures of United States lower than 30%, Russia (<14%), of United Kingdom (<10%), France (<6%), none (<12%) and China (<10%) may be hidden
Country polled Russia United States United Kingdom China India France none
Alliance  Mongolia
71%
Alliance  Armenia
67%
Alliance  Serbia
56%
16%
Alliance  Greece
48%
Alliance  China
47%
Alliance  Bulgaria
42%
17%
4%
Alliance  Ukraine
33%
35%
11%
Alliance  Slovenia
30%
8%
15%
Alliance  Latvia
27%
11%
14%
Alliance  Lebanon
25%
15%
23%
Alliance  Turkey
23%
9%
31%
Alliance  North Macedonia
23%
33%
17%
Alliance  Mexico
22%
42%
11%
9%
Alliance  Peru
21%
44%
14%
Alliance  Iran
20%
30%
Alliance  Bosnia and Herzegovina
19%
12%
43%
Alliance  Vietnam
18%
Alliance  India
16%
50%
Alliance  Finland
15%
37%
16%
Alliance  Romania
15%
51%
7%
Alliance  South Africa
15%
45%
21%
Alliance  Albania
14%
66%
10%
Alliance  Kosovo
92%
Alliance  South Korea
49%
10%
32%
Alliance  Papua New Guinea
70%
13%
Alliance  Israel
68%
10%
Alliance  Philippines
67%
16%
Alliance  Japan
64%
Alliance  Canada
62%
12%
Alliance  Ghana
62%
10%
Alliance  United Kingdom
58%
8%
Alliance  Ecuador
58%
Alliance  Lithuania
58%
10%
Alliance  Paraguay
57%
Alliance  Brazil
55%
10%
Alliance  France
54%
13%
Alliance  Spain
52%
12%
Alliance  Denmark
52%
23%
Alliance  Fiji
52%
15%
12%
Alliance  Norway
51%
23%
Alliance  Australia
49%
16%
Alliance  Poland
49%
10%
Alliance  Germany
41%
19%
Alliance  Italy
41%
11%
Alliance  Nigeria
41%
Alliance  Portugal
40%
21%
Alliance  Afghanistan
39%
22%
17%
Alliance  Iceland
38%
27%
Alliance  Thailand
38%
11%
29%
Alliance  Argentina
36%
13%
22%
Alliance  Ireland
34%
25%
Alliance  Indonesia
32%
10%
21%
Alliance  Czech Republic
32%
15%
6%
Alliance  Sweden
31%
29%
6%
Alliance  Estonia
31%
16%
Alliance  Belgium
30%
12%
25%
Alliance  Austria
16%
Alliance  DR Congo
16%
8%
Alliance  Palestine
17%
8%
12%
Alliance  United States
43%
7%
Alliance  Iraq
6%
27%
Alliance  Pakistan
72%
Alliance  Bangladesh
16%
46%
Alliance  Russia
44%
4%

See also

References

Bibliography

  • Beer, Francis A. (1970). Alliances: Latent War Communities in the Contemporary World. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston.

Tags:

Alliance EffectsAlliance International opinionAlliance BibliographyAllianceBusiness allianceMilitary alliancePeoplePolitical allianceSovereign stateWarWorld War IWorld War II

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