Redefining European Security

Front Cover
Taylor & Francis, 1999 - 372 pages
Redefining European Security is a collection of essays concerned with changing perspectives on peace and political stability in Europe since the end of the Cold War, in both the hard security terms of military capacity and readiness and in the realm of soft security concerns of economic stability and democratic reform. European governments, the European Union, and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization are dealing with the fundamental problem of determining the very parameters of Europe, politically, economically, and institutionally. This book defines security as the efforts undertaken by national governments and multilateral institutions, beginning with the end of the Cold War and the reunification of Germany, to continue to protect European populations from acts of war and politically-motivated violence in light of the dissolution of the imminent political threat posed to Western Europe by the Soviet Union, 1945-1991 Together these essays assess the progress made in Europe toward preventing conflict, as well as in ending conflict when it occurs, after the abrupt passing of a situation in which the source and nature of a conflict were highly predictable and the emergence of new circumstances in which potential security threats are multiple, variable, and difficult to measure. Contemporary Europe is a mixture of old and new, of arrested and accelerated history. Europe's governments and institutions have been only partly successful in meeting new security challenges, to a high degree because of failing unity and political will. Yesterday, Europe only just avoided perishing from imperial follies and frenzied ideologies, wrote the late Raymond Aron in 1976, she could perish tomorrow through historical abdication.

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Contents

European Security Between the Logic of Anarchy and the Logic of Community
13
The Revival of Geopolitics in Europe
29
The Economic Elements of the European Security Order
51
A Separate Peace? Economic Stabilization and Development and the New Fault Line of European Security
73
Transnational Threats and European Security
93
Principal Players
115
Frances Security Policy since the End of the Cold War
117
France and the Organization of Security in PostCold War Europe
145
Russia and European Security
207
The Future of American Atlanticism
229
The Multilateral Dimension Hard and Soft
253
The Military Aspects of European Security
255
Between Ambition and Paralysis The European Unions Common Foreign and Security Policy and the War in the Former Yugoslavia
273
The OSCE Nonmilitary Dimensions of Cooperative Security in Europe1
299
Where is Europe?
325
Select Bibliography
349

Redefining European Security The Role of German Foreign Policy
165
Germany Is Sound Diplomacy the Better Part of Security?
181
List of Contributors
363
Copyright

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