1st Edition

US Hegemony, American Troops Abroad and Burden-Sharing West Europe and East Asia during and after the Cold War

Edited By Nobuki Kawasaki, Takeshi Sakade, Hubert Zimmermann Copyright 2025
    208 Pages 9 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Kawasaki, Sakade, Zimmerman, and their contributors examine the historical development of burden-sharing among the US and its allies after the Second World War, looking at examples from Western Europe and East Asia. 

     Through a series of case studies, the contributors to this volume identify the characteristics and historical transformations in the burden sharing relationships between the US and its allies. In addition to diplomatic and security concerns, they also look at the economic and financial dimensions of burden sharing and how all these elements are intertwined. They also address the different dynamics of burden sharing between the US and Western Europe – notably Germany and the UK – on the one hand, and between the US and East Asia – particularly Japan and Korea – on the other. In particular, they argue that while Western European countries provided most of the economic and political support for American policies until the 1960s, the economic support from East Asian countries became much more important from the 1970s onwards. 

     A valuable contribution to the literature on burden sharing and strategic alliance for scholars of international relations and the diplomatic history of the Cold War.

    Introduction

    Part I: From the Early Cold War to the Crisis Period (1946-75)

    1. The US and UK’s Relationship in Occupied Germany between 1946 and 1947: Analyzing the Burden Sharing of Occupation Costs

    2. British Independent Nuclear Deterrence and the Troop Level of the British Army on the Rhine, January 1957 - March 1963

    3. Reshaping the Link between Burden-Sharing and Influence: US Alliance Policy during the 1966 NATO Crisis

    4. US-UK-German Trilateral Offset Negotiations and the European Defense Industrial Base

    Part II: Regional Shift from Western Europe to East Asia (1976-91)

    5. Subsidizing US Hegemony: The Offset Agreements in US-West German Relations, 1960-1976

    6. The Historical Change in the Logic of Japan’s Host Nation Support for the U.S. Forces

    7. South Korea’s Pride and Confidence in Burden-Sharing with the U.S.

    Part III: Post-Cold War, 1991-present

    8. Military Intervention as Burden-Sharing: The Debates in Germany and Japan

    Conclusion

    Index

    Biography

    Nobuki Kawasaki is Professor of Faculty of Policy Studies at Kansai University, Japan. After graduating from Graduate School of Economics at Kyoto University, Japan, he has held a position as special researcher of the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science.

    Takeshi Sakade is Professor of Graduate School of Economics at Kyoto University, Japan.  After graduating from Graduate School of Economics at Kyoto University, he has held positions at Toyama University, Japan.

    Hubert Zimmerman is Professor of International Relations at Philipps-University Marburg, Germany.  After graduating from the EUI in Florence (Italy), he has held, among others, positions at Düsseldorf University (Germany) and Cornell University (USA).