ABSTRACT

This book explores the largely neglected issue of responses to the US Strategic Defence Initiative (SDI, or the 'Star Wars' missile defence programme) across NATO.

The chapters here explore the reactions of different Western allies to the announcement of the SDI in 1983 and especially the 1985 invitation to participate. While existing studies have explored the origins of the American programme and the role it may have played in ending the Cold War, this volume breaks new ground by considering the impact of the SDI on transatlantic relations in the 1980s. Based on newly available archival sources, this volume re-evaluates the responses of eight NATO member-state governments, as well as the Soviet leadership, to the SDI. In addition to looking at ‘top-down’ governmental reactions, the volume also explores the ‘bottom-up’ response to the SDI of civil society and peace activists on both sides of the Atlantic. The volume examines how the American initiative – derisively named ‘Star Wars’ by its detractors – provoked a crisis in relations with its allies during the final decade of the Cold War and how those tensions within NATO were ultimately resolved.

This book will be of much interest to students of Cold War history, strategic studies, foreign policy and international history.

chapter 1|11 pages

Introduction

The Strategic Defence Initiative and the Atlantic Alliance in the 1980s

part 1|41 pages

SDI and the Superpowers

part 2|56 pages

Government Decision-Making Behind SDI Participation

chapter 4|16 pages

Britain, SDI, and the United States, 1983–1986

A Guarded Relationship

chapter 5|22 pages

Germany and SDI, 1983–1986

Anchoring US Extended Nuclear Deterrence and Westbindung for an Offense-Defense Future

chapter 6|16 pages

Italy and the SDI Project

Envisioning a Technological Breakthrough for the Whole Alliance?

part 3|75 pages

NATO Governments' Rejection of SDI

chapter 7|16 pages

France's Reaction Towards the Strategic Defence Initiative (1983–1986)

Transforming a Strategic Threat Into a Technological Opportunity

chapter 8|17 pages

Canada's ‘Polite No’ to SDI

A Question of Sovereignty?

chapter 9|18 pages

The Netherlands and SDI

We Have to Do the Research

chapter 10|22 pages

Danish and Norwegian Responses to SDI

Between Low-Voiced Scepticism and Outspoken Opposition

part 4|58 pages

Civil Society and the Peace Movement

chapter 11|15 pages

The SDI

A Further Challenge for the US Anti-Nuclear Movement?

chapter 12|17 pages

SDI as a Contested Imaginary in British Culture and Society

‘Winning in Space’

chapter 14|7 pages

Star Wars

A View From the Commentariat