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Asymmetrical warfare Strategy and its Implications to the Black Sea Regional Security in 21st Century: Non-State Aggressive Actors and Terrorism
Author(s) -
Vakhtang Maisaia,
Magdana Beselia
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
ante portas
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2353-6306
DOI - 10.33674/120204
Subject(s) - geopolitics , annexation , state (computer science) , political science , terrorism , black sea , politics , power (physics) , political economy , great power , regional power , china , foreign policy , territorial integrity , law , geography , sociology , sovereignty , oceanography , physics , geodesy , grid , algorithm , quantum mechanics , computer science , geology
Today, military politics have became a dominant factor in the aegis of thecontemporary international and regional security, and this provision isalso relevant in the Black Sea Region. The nature of military politicspresupposes the existence of asymmetric threats, which is revealed in theimplementation of functional politics by the states and implies thefollowing components: power, chance, astonishment, armed forces, theirdoctrines, and armaments. The asymmetric military identification is vitalto recognize at the regional level, with the example of the Black SeaRegion and it’s involvement of so-called ‘Non-State Aggressive Actors’(DAESH, Al-Qaeda, etc.). After the Russian annexation of Crimea, theBlack Sea Region would be designated as a conflict zone and thereforeNATO has reinforced it’s eastern security policy accordingly. TheInternational Community witnessed that there are two regionalhegemons: Russia and Turkey, pursuing their own geopolitical andeconomic interests in the Black Sea region and the region around theCaspian Sea (including one that sees regional power interests). Recently,China, as a global power in its own right, with its ‘One Belt and OneRoad’ Initiative (OBOR), expresses it’s own interests toward the region,

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