NATO in the post-Cold War era: continuity and transformation
In: Security, conflict and cooperation in the contemporary world
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In: Security, conflict and cooperation in the contemporary world
In: Security, conflict and cooperation in the contemporary world
This book analyses the evolution of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) and its policies from the Cold War until today. NATOs future cannot be fully understood without analysing its past: the origins of its structure and goals, and their transformation over time. By exploring NATOs geopolitical and military role at crucial points throughout history, this edited volume considers the challenges and threats which have faced the alliance, as well as its strengths and weaknesses. It covers highly-debated and unresolved issues such as budgetary burden-sharing and the military transatlantic gap, the enlargement process, and the role of Asia in influencing NATOs policies. Combining a historical approach with international perspectives, this book is an interdisciplinary read that will appeal to scholars of diplomatic history and international relations. Chapters 1 and 2 are available open access under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License via link.springer.com. Massimo de Leonardis is Professor Emeritus of History of Treaties and International Politics at the Catholic University of the Sacred Heart, Milan, Italy, President of the International Commission of Military History and Editor of the Quaderni di Scienze Politiche. He has written and edited 27 books, and sits on the boards of various Italian and international journals and institutions.
In: Security, Conflict and Cooperation in the Contemporary World Series
Intro -- Acknowledgments -- Praise for NATO in the Post-Cold War Era -- Contents -- Notes on Contributors -- 1 Introduction: NATO in Its Seventh Decade-A Reappraisal -- History's Most Successful Alliance Needs Better Publicity -- NATO Evolution During the Cold War -- A Flexible Treaty -- NATO Operations After the Cold War -- Bibliography -- 2 The Historical Roots of the Atlantic Alliance Between Values and Interests -- The Short Term Path to the Atlantic Pact -- The United States: 'Necessary but Undesirable' -- Failed Efforts to Create an 'Atlantic Community': The Debate on Art. 2 in the 1950s -- Conclusion: Increasingly Diverging Perspectives After the Cold War, but Still Very Close -- Bibliography -- 3 A Troublesome Relationship: The US Grand Strategy and NATO -- The Cold War: An Age of Consensus? -- From 11/9 to 9/11: The Legacy of a 'Lost' Decade? -- The Age of Disenchantment: 9/11 to 11/9 -- The US 'Pivot to Asia': Another Challenge to the Atlantic Alliance? -- Concluding Remarks -- Bibliography -- 4 Russia-NATO-US: From Detente to Impossible Cooperation -- Bibliography -- 5 The Anglo-American Special Relationship and NATO: The Past and the Present as Indicators of What Might Come Next? -- Introduction -- The Most Equal -- SACLANT and Anglo-American Relations -- The SNF Crisis and Anglo-American Relations -- Post-Cold War Relations -- Conclusions -- Bibliography -- 6 The Role of NATO in European Integration -- Introduction -- Automatism and Discrimination: European Defence Before the North Atlantic Treaty: 1947-1949 -- The Conditioned De-discrimination: Germany, the Failure of the EDC, and the Creation of the WEU (1950-1954) -- The Pleven Plan and the European Defence Community (EDC) -- The Western European Union (WEU) and West German Rearmament Within NATO.
In: Quaderni di scienze politiche 12 (2017)
In: Quaderni del Dipartimento di scienze politiche, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore 9-10 (2016)
In: Quaderni del Dipartimento di scienze politiche, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore 5-6 (2013)
In: Biblioteca storica 10
In: Eunomia; Anno V n.s., n. 2, 2016; 179-194 ; Eunomia. Rivista semestrale di Storia e Politica Internazionali; Anno V n.s., n. 2, 2016; 179-194
This historical survey maintains that European countries have no faults to be forgiven by Is-lam. Muhammad was the only founder of a religion being also a military leader and Islam was a perma-nent threat to Europe from the IX century to the XVII century. In contemporary age the religious factor was no longer relevant for Europe (no longer Christianity) in its relations with the Ottoman Empire. Nowadays a secularized Europe opening the doors to Islamic immigration is courting disaster.
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In: Eunomia; Anno IV n.s., n. 2, 2015; 21-38 ; Eunomia. Rivista semestrale di Storia e Politica Internazionali; Anno IV n.s., n. 2, 2015; 21-38
The Great War started as a classical conflict of power politics. Secret war diplomacy clearly reveals the belligerents' imperialistic ambitions while an ideological confrontation between authoritarianism and democracy was impossible, being Tsarist Russia a pillar of the Triple Entente. Everybody expected a short war; the prolongation of the hostilities, the fall of the Tsar, the intervention of the United States and other factors transformed the character of the war, which according to Triple Entente's propaganda became an ideological struggle to promote democracy and nationality. In this respect 1917 was a key year. Pope Benedict XV's note of 1st August 1917 proposed ideas for a new international system quite similar to those of Wilson, but envisaged a compromise peace while the American president wanted to destroy the German Empire. In 1914 the Old Continent was the «proud tower» at the top of world power: this ended with «the suicide of civilian Europe», as the Pope labelled the war already in 1916.
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