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The New Geopolitics of Terror examines the impact of global reach
terror on states. This book surveys the current crises and tensions
in the Middle East, focussing primarily on the upheavals in Syria
and Iraq, and the interaction between groups, such as Al Qaeda and
ISIS state actors and Western security. It explains the threat to
Western interests and states from wide-reaching Islamic terrorism,
geopolitical intervention by outside actors and regional power
struggles. It critiques the inadequate political, military and
diplomatic responses from Western powers, and the lack of effective
leadership, highlighting the potential dangers should the West fail
to remedy these. The book also identifies the difficulties and
dangers of continued Western involvement in the Middle East, and
proposes specific actions and interventions in order to prevent
further deterioration in the region and in Western societies.
Specifically, the book calls for a grand strategy underpinned by
political ambition that combines diplomatic, political, economic
and military measures, calls for effective counter-terrorism
measures in more resilient Western societies, and highlights the
importance of the role that global players outside those regions
can and must play if peace is to be restored. Written by two
leading scholars, this book will be of much interest to students of
terrorism studies, strategic studies, defence studies, Middle
Eastern politics and IR in general.
The transatlantic relationship has come under enormous stress from
both sides of the ocean since the end of the Cold War and,
especially, the election of President George W. Busch. The collapse
of the Warsaw Pact and the Soviet Union three American and European
strategic thought into disarray as scholars and policy makers alike
scrambled to formulate new rationales for Cold War institutions
like the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and the much ballyhooed
"special relationship" between the United States and the United
Kingdom. Unfortunately, no one with the clear vision of the late
George F. Kennan emerged to soften transatlantic squabbles over the
Balkans, the post-Soviet space, and emerging security challenges in
the Middle East, Africa, and Asia. Bush administration officials
and like-minded pundits miffed many Europeans with their causal
unilateralist rhetoric and apparent willingness to abandon
long-standing multilateral initiatives like the Kyoto Treaty. After
a brief warming of relations following the horrific attacks of 11
September, American-European interactions turned sour once again as
France and Germany led the effort to prevent the UN Security
Council from passing a resolution authorizing the Iraq invasion. Of
the major European powers only Great Britain offered substantial
assistance to the American-led coalition, an artifact of Prime
Minister Blair's personal commitments and perhaps of the special
relationship. Today, the gradual disengagement of other European
coalition members from Iraq and the reluctance of NATO to play a
more active role there further fuels discontent in Washington
policy circles. The 2003 announcement by Javier Solana of the
European Union of a European Security Strategy rekindled American
fears that the EU would either emerge as a challenger to U.S.
primacy or, paradoxically, remain too weak to support American
global initiatives. Aside from the ebbs and flows of politics, the
fate of the transatlantic alliance remains a major strategic
question for both the United States and its various European
partners. A serious, long-term breach of the close security
cooperation that characterized most of the Cold and post-Cold War
periods would force both sides to rethink their defense policies.
From a naval perspective, the transatlantic relationship remains
one of the strategic touchstones for the American navy, even as the
geostrategic focus of the United States has shifted from Europe to
the Middle East and Asia. European navies - not only those of Great
Britain but of France and Germany, and others as well - support
American-led operations across the globe. In the Indian Ocean, for
example, Europe provided ships and aircraft to enforce embargoes on
material destined for Afghanistan and Iraq prior to the campaigns
of 2002 and 2003. Across the globe, European allies have
participated in exercise associated with the Proliferation Security
Initiative. With "The Atlantic Crises: Britain, Europe and Parting
from the United States," Mr. William Hopkinson weighs in with a
commonsensical and timely overview of the origins and evolution of
the transatlantic relationship since the second World War. He pays
particular attention to the U.S. relationship with Great Britain
and its impact on intra-European debates. He reminds us that while
the transatlantic relationship has never been as smooth as some
would have us believe, common interests and value have allowed all
parties to adjust, and readjust, to changes in the security
environment and particular national goals. However, and perhaps
most importantly, Hopkinson recognizes that the current breach may
be far more serious than those of the past and thus that greater
efforts may be required to reach accommodations in the future.
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