Four years after the Cold War, the United States and the European Allies have still not found a new security system to deal with war and instability in Europe. Institutional reform in NATO, the EC/WEU, and CSCE has produced more competition than progress. In this volume, expert foreign affairs scholars and practitioners assess the problems that have plagued Europe's security organizations and offer a pragmatic political rationale for combining joint forces for the future.
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Four years after the Cold War, the United States and the European Allies have still not found a new security system to deal with war and instability in Europe. Institutional reform in NATO, the EC/WEU, and CSCE has produced more competition than progress. In this volume, expert foreign affairs scholars and practitioners assess the problems that have plagued Europe's security organizations and offer a pragmatic political rationale for combining joint forces for the future.
Read Less