Coalitions that form when two or more states combine their military capabilities and promise to coordinate their policies to increase mutual security.
Published in Chapter:
Conflicts in the Modern World and Their Impact on International Security
Ketevan Chakhava (International Black Sea University, Georgia)
Copyright: © 2022
|Pages: 24
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-7998-9586-2.ch004
Abstract
The central problem of the theory of international relations is the problem of international conflicts. And this is quite justified, if we bear in mind the goal that has been objectively facing all of humanity in recent decades – this is survival, the prevention of a global thermonuclear catastrophe. Since any armed clash is only an extreme expression of a political conflict, its highest stage, insofar as the study of the causes of conflicts and methods of their settlement, especially at those stages when it is still relatively easy to carry out, has not only theoretical but also great practical importance. An international conflict is a direct or indirect clash of interests of two or more parties (states, groups of states, peoples, political movements) based on the contradictions of an objective or subjective nature between them. By their origin, these contradictions and the problems they generate in relations between states can be territorial, national, religious, economic, military-strategic, scientific and technical, etc.