ABSTRACT

This new Handbook provides readers with the tools to understand the evolution of transatlantic security from the Cold War era to the early 21st century.

After World War II, the US retained a strong presence as the dominant member of NATO throughout the Cold War. Former enemies, such as Germany, became close allies, while even countries that often criticized the United States made no serious attempt to break with Washington. This pattern of security co-operation continued after the end of the Cold War, with NATO expansion eastwards extending US influence. Despite the Iraq war prompting a seemingly irreparable transatlantic confrontation, the last years of the Bush administration witnessed a warming of US-European relations, expected to continue with the Obama administration.

The contributors address the following key questions arising from the history of transatlantic security relations:

  • What lies behind the growing and continuing European dependency on security policy on the United States and what are the political consequences of this?
  • Is this dependency likely to continue or will an independent European Common Foreign and Security Policy eventually emerge?
  • What has been the impact of 'out-of-area' issues on transatlantic security cooperation?

The essays in this Handbook cover a broad range of historical and contemporary themes, including the founding of NATO; the impact of the Korean War; the role of nuclear (non-)proliferation; perspectives of individual countries (especially France and Germany); the impact of culture, identity and representation in shaping post-Cold War transatlantic relations; institutional issues, particularly EU-NATO relations; the Middle East; and the legacy of the Cold War, notably tensions with Russia.

This Handbook will be of much interest to students of transatlantic security, NATO, Cold War Studies, foreign policy and IR in general.

part I|152 pages

Transatlantic security in the Cold War era

chapter 1|14 pages

Three ministers and the world they made

Acheson, Bevin and Schuman, and the North Atlantic Treaty, March–April 1949

chapter 2|15 pages

The Korean War

Miscalculation and alliance transformation

chapter 4|13 pages

The Fourth Republic and NATO

Loyalty to the Alliance versus national demands?

chapter 5|16 pages

The Fifth Republic and NATO

Odd-man out or the only country in step?

chapter 6|15 pages

NATO forever?

Willy Brandt's heretical thoughts on an alternative future

chapter 7|14 pages

Negotiating with the enemy and having problems with the allies

The impact of the Non-Proliferation Treaty on transatlantic relations

chapter 8|20 pages

Power shifts and new security needs

NATO, European identity, and the reorganization of the West, 1967–75

chapter 9|15 pages

West Germany and the United States during the Middle East Crisis of 1973

‘Nothing but a semi-colony’?

chapter 10|15 pages

The United States and the ‘loss’ of Iran

Repercussions on transatlantic security

part II|147 pages

Transatlantic security beyond the Cold War

chapter 12|11 pages

The road to Saint-Malo

Germany and EU–NATO relations after the Cold War

chapter 15|12 pages

Venus has learned geopolitics

The European Union's frontier and transatlantic relations

chapter 16|13 pages

The rise and fall of criticism towards the United States in transatlantic relations

From anti-Americanism to Obamania

chapter 17|19 pages

Strategic culture and security

American antiterrorist policy and the use of soft power after 9/11

chapter 19|10 pages

A realistic reset with Russia

Practical expectations for US–Russian relations

chapter 20|14 pages

The Obama administration and transatlantic security

Problems and prospects