German Foreign and Security Policy
Intro -- GERMAN FOREIGNAND SECURITY POLICY -- CONTENTS -- PREFACE -- GERMAN FOREIGN AND SECURITY POLICY:TRENDS AND TRANSATLANTIC IMPLICATIONS* -- Germany in the EU -- Summary -- Introduction -- Current Domestic Context -- Foundations of German Foreign Policy -- Multilateralism As National Interest -- Germany in the EU and NATO - The "Middle Path -- Germany in the United Nations -- Evolving Domestic Debate -- EU Enlargement -- Common Foreign and Security Policy (CFSP) and Relations with Russia -- European Security and Defense Policy (ESDP) -- European Leadership and Franco-German Relations -- Evolving Security and Defense Policy -- Germany in NATO -- Force Transformation and Bundeswehr Reform -- Transatlantic Implications -- Appendix 1. Selected Issues in U.S.-GermanRelations - Current Status -- Economic Ties -- Counterterrorism Cooperation -- The Middle East60 -- The Israeli-Palestinian Conflict and Lebanon -- Iraq -- Untitled -- Afghanistan -- GERMANY AND EUROPE:NEW DEAL OR DÉJÀ VU?+ -- Notre Europe -- Preliminary Remarks and Acknowledgments -- I. Germany and Europe: Structure of a Relationship -- 1.1. Germany's Europe Policy: What It Was and What It Is -- 1.2. The Germans and Europe: Felt Impressions -- 1.2.1. The Population -- 1.2.2. The Parties -- THE CDU/CSU -- The SPD -- The Green Party, The FDP -- The Others: The Left (die Linke, PDS) the DVU, the NPD -- II. Objectives of the German EU Presidency -- 2.1. The Spring Summit -- 2.2. The Special Summit for the 50th Anniversary of the Treaty of Rome -- 2.3. The June Summit -- 2.4. The Neighbourhood Policy's Objectives -- 2.5. A "New Ostpolitik" for the EU -- III. The German-French Duo: A (Quick) Look back and forward -- 3.1. From Europe's Engine to Locomotive without Carriages -- 3.2. France, Seen by Germany -- 3.3. Keys to Re-launching the European Project -- Previously Published Studies.