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Impact of Actors' Interests on Crisis

Politics
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Impact of Actors' Interests on Crisis

Politics
01 May 2026

The Impact of Political Actors’ Interests on a Contemporary Crisis

Overview

Political actors do not respond to crises purely on the basis of humanitarian concern or international law — they act according to their interests. Understanding how interests shape actor behaviour is fundamental to explaining why crises unfold as they do, why some interventions are robust while others are token, and why international responses are often inconsistent. In VCE Politics, students must analyse how the interests of diverse actors cause, shape, escalate, or prolong their chosen crisis.

KEY TAKEAWAY: Interests are the engine of political behaviour. Every response — from military intervention to diplomatic abstention to humanitarian aid — is shaped by what the actor stands to gain or lose. Analysing interests is the key to explaining why actors behave as they do, rather than simply what they do.

What Are Political Interests?

Interests can be categorised along several dimensions:

Interest Type Description Example
Security Physical survival, territorial integrity, military dominance US interest in preventing Russian dominance of Eastern Europe
Economic Trade, investment, resources, sanctions avoidance China’s economic interest in protecting Myanmar BRI investments
Ideological Spreading or defending political values and systems US interest in upholding the liberal international order
Diplomatic/reputational Status, alliance relationships, international standing Russia’s interest in being seen as a great power
Domestic political Maintaining domestic support, winning elections, managing internal divisions Saudi Arabia’s interest in projecting strength in Yemen to distract from domestic reform costs

Case Study: Russia-Ukraine War — How Interests Shaped the Crisis

Russia’s Interests

Security interest: Russia’s stated concern — preventing Ukraine’s NATO membership — reflects a security interest in maintaining a buffer zone between Russia and NATO’s eastern flank. Whether or not this justifies the invasion legally, it explains the decision. Putin’s security interests are intertwined with ideological ones: a belief that Ukraine is not a distinct nation and that Russia has a civilisational interest in keeping it within its sphere.

Economic interest: Control over Ukraine’s industrial east (Donbas) and the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, and access to the Black Sea through Crimea (annexed 2014) represent significant economic and strategic interests. Ukraine is also a major agricultural producer — wheat and sunflower exports from Ukraine and Russia together represent 28% of global supply.

Ideological/regime survival interest: Putin framed the war domestically as a struggle against Western-imposed liberalism — protecting Russian cultural identity. This serves his interest in regime legitimacy: the war narrative suppresses domestic opposition (Navalny’s death in custody in February 2024 illustrates this brutal calculus).

Ukraine’s Interests

Sovereignty and survival: Ukraine’s primary interest is existential — preserving territorial integrity and preventing annexation. Every political decision — including accepting military aid, pursuing NATO membership, and engaging in peace negotiations — is filtered through this fundamental interest.

Western integration: Zelensky’s government has a deep interest in European integration — economically (EU access) and militarily (NATO security guarantees). This aligns with economic modernisation interests and the interests of a pro-Western political coalition.

USA/NATO States’ Interests

Security interest: A Russian military victory in Ukraine would redraw European borders by force for the first time since WW2, fundamentally destabilising the NATO security architecture. The US has a strong interest in deterring this precedent.

Economic interest: Arms manufacturers (Raytheon, Lockheed Martin, BAE Systems) benefit enormously from the conflict — \$75 billion in US military aid to Ukraine through 2023 generated significant industrial interest in the war economy. This is not the cause of US support, but it shapes the politics of sustaining it.

Alliance interests: NATO unity (Sweden and Finland joining) strengthens collective deterrence — the war advanced a core US strategic interest in European security architecture.

Competing domestic interest: As the war extended into 2023–2024, Republican opposition in the US Congress to further aid demonstrated how domestic political interests (Trump’s MAGA base; isolationist tendencies) compete with strategic interests in sustaining Ukrainian support.

China’s Competing Interests

China faces a genuine tension between competing interests:
- Economic interest in Russia: Energy imports at discounted prices, currency swap agreements, continued trade
- Economic interest in the West: European and US markets far more important to Chinese exports
- Reputational interest: Being seen as a neutral party and responsible global actor
- Ideological interest: Undermining the US-led order and demonstrating that the West’s “rules” are selectively applied
- Taiwan precedent interest: If the international community effectively responds to Russian territorial aggression, this may strengthen deterrence vis-a-vis Taiwan — not in China’s interest

EXAM TIP: When explaining how interests impact a crisis, use a structured argument: [Actor]’s [type] interest in [specific outcome] led them to [specific action], which had the consequence of [outcome for the crisis]. This demonstrates causal analysis, not just listing.

Case Study: Yemen War — How Interests Shaped the Crisis

Actor Key Interest Impact on Crisis
Saudi Arabia Prevent Iranian-aligned Houthi government on its southern border Led Saudi coalition intervention (2015–), world’s worst humanitarian catastrophe
Iran Expand regional influence through Houthi proxy forces Arms and training for Houthis prolonged and intensified conflict
UAE Counter-terrorism, economic influence in Aden and southern Yemen UAE-backed southern separatists complicated peace process
USA Saudi alliance, counterterrorism, oil stability Arms sales to Saudi Arabia continued until 2021 (Biden partially reversed); intelligence sharing
UN/OCHA Humanitarian access Struggled to maintain aid corridors; donor fatigue reduced funding

Interests vs. Stated Positions

A key analytical move is distinguishing between an actor’s stated position (what they say) and their revealed interests (what their actions suggest):

  • Saudi Arabia claimed to be restoring Yemeni government legitimacy — but UAE’s behaviour in southern Yemen revealed competing interests in Saudi Arabia’s own alliance
  • China claimed neutrality in Ukraine while economic ties with Russia deepened through 2022–2023
  • Western states claimed humanitarian concern for Rohingya while continuing to engage with Myanmar military on counterterrorism until 2017

VCAA FOCUS: Analysing the impact of interests means showing how interests caused specific decisions or actions, which in turn affected the crisis’s trajectory. You must demonstrate causation, not just correlation.

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