ABSTRACT

This book, first published in 1986, is a major study of semialignment and a review of the individual nations within NATO to which the model could be applied. Towards the end of the Cold War, there arose within NATO this intermediate category between alignment and nonalignment, whereby a member state enjoyed the status and facilities of NATO membership while disassociating itself from certain NATO programmes. This book analyses the phenomenon, and the possibility that it weakened the credibility of NATO deterrence and the defence posture versus the Soviet Union.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter One|46 pages

Denmark: Half-Hearted Partner

chapter Chapter Four|38 pages

Canada

chapter Chapter Four-I|20 pages

Canada: Government Policy towards NATO

chapter Chapter Four-II|17 pages

The New Democratic Party and National Defence

chapter Chaper Five|62 pages

Norway: Deterrence versus Nonprovocation