Transatlantic relations have been among the most crucially
important areas for US foreign policy since 1945. For reasons of
self-interest and with regard to common transatlantic values and
political, economic and security interests, every American
Secretary of State to date has dedicated a considerable period of
time to America's relations with Europe. This book assesses the
transatlantic policy which America's most important post-Second
World War Secretaries of State pursued. Brief profiles of each
Secretary's political philosophy and his/her policy towards Europe
provide insights into the continuities and changes US foreign
policy towards Europe has displayed from 1945 to the present. The
book provides a synopsis of America's relations with Europe during
the last six decades. It establishes an overview of the crucial
problems in American-European relations and indeed in America's
global role. Each chapter embeds an assessment of the respective
Secretaries of State within a general survey of American foreign
policy during both the Cold War and the post-Cold War world. This
book was published as a special issue of the Journal of
Transatlantic Studies.
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