The Impact of Different Basic Trust Types During Critical Situations: The Case of Saudi Arabia and Kuwait
Abstract
The primary objective of this study is to elucidate the impact of ontological security on states’ foreign policy preferences. The study posits that foreign policy preferences are closely related with their basic trust, a product of the intricate interplay between actor’s agentic capacity and its internal and external environment. This theoretical proposition is subsequently subjected to comparative examination within the contexts of Saudi Arabia and Kuwait. The study contends that despite sharing similar concerns regarding physical and ontological security, these two actors have pursued distinct foreign policy trajectories regarding the Arab uprisings and normalization with Israel that owe to differing types of basic trust. In doing so, the study aims to contribute to the ontological security literature from two perspectives: 1) to refine and elucidate the scope of the basic trust concept by reinterpreting it and highlighting its central role in ontological security analysis, and 2) to contribute to the practical applications of the field by applying the concepts developed in the ontological security literature to case studies of Saudi Arabia and Kuwait.
Keywords
Ontological Security, Foreign Policy, Middle East, Arab Uprisings, Normalization with Israel
Citation
Tamer Kaşıkcı and Mustafa Yetim, “The Impact of Different Basic Trust Types During Critical Situations: The Case of Saudi Arabia and Kuwait”, Uluslararasi Iliskiler, Vol. 21, No 83, 2024, pp. 81-96, 10.33458/uidergisi.1465056
Affiliations
Tamer KAŞIKCI Assistant Professor, Department of International Relations, EskişehirOsmangazi University, Eskişehir E-Mail: [email protected] Orcid: 0000-0003-2299-8863
Mustafa YETIM Associate Professor, Department of International Relations, EskişehirOsmangazi University, Eskişehir E-Mail: [email protected] Orcid: 0000-0001-6013-9299