Startling changes are taking place in Western Europe; this study
argues that the U.S. strategic response should be no less dramatic.
Michael J. Collins describes a creation of a new type of political
organization--a new way for nations to integrate themselves
politically in Western Europe--and contends that this new model is
dynamic enough to rival older historical paradigms. Western
Europeans are making massive changes in their international
arrangements, with each other and the outside world, to permit a
natural evolution of national cultures along with the development
of an intra-European culture. This changing political and economic
situation in Europe has already affected the way the United States
looks at the world diplomatically, and it may soon alter the
general thrust of U.S. military strategy with regard to NATO.
Europeans and Americans alike are questioning how much longer a
united Europe can expect American troops to defend them against the
Soviet Union, now that the Cold War era has ended. U.S. military
strategy must change because the world is changing, and the
increasing power of Western Europe is a major factor in the
equation.
Collins concludes that the Common Market Countries can no longer
be understood as a simple collection of nation-states joined in a
cartel or economic alliance, calling for a change in U.S. foreign
policy and strategy. Chapter 1 describes the developments in
Western Europe since World War II. Chapters 2 and 3 discuss how the
new Western European alliance interacts along both military and
political lines. Chapter Four describes the character of Western
Europe and the replacement of the nation-state concept with a new
flexibility in dealing with each other and the surrender of
sovereignty by the constituent states in limited but decisive
areas. The final two chapters suggest possible policy and strategic
responses by the United States. A chapter on strategic implications
is bound to be controversial, particularly to traditional military
strategists. These thought-provoking analyses and policy
implementations will interest scholars and students of European
History and Politics, Comparative Politics, United States Foreign
Policy and Defense, as well as government policy makers and
decision makers in international business.
General
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