Affiliation:
1. LBJ School of Public A(airs, University of Texas at Austin
2. Asian Studies program at Georgetown University and the Asia Regional Chair at the Foreign Service Institute of the US Department of State
Abstract
This paper argues that a pragmatist theory of international relations, combined with parables of alliance formation from local proverbs and literary classics, best explains the art of Thai diplomacy from a historical perspective. Notably avoiding Western colonization, the Thais have
enjoyed relative sovereignty and independence throughout their history. Rather than balancing, bandwagoning, or hedging, our study finds that Thailand has deliberately leveraged asymmetrical partnerships between often-opposed great powers and more symmetrical partnerships with less powerful
states and multilateral organizations in order to maintain its physical and identity- based ontological security. We draw our empirical evidence from four historical periods: the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, World War II, the Cold War, and the post-Cold War modern era. Our findings
can be applied to other Southeast Asian states and their own parables of alliance.
Subject
Sociology and Political Science,Geography, Planning and Development