The end of the Cold War heralded many things. The fact that so much is still written about it says a lot about how deeply it changed the world and how little we still understand about the present. While much has been said about US foreign policy since then, too little attention is often paid to the effects it’s had on the foreign policies of other countries.
From 1945 through 1991, the United States had one primary goal, to contain and ultimately defeat communism. It was the prism through which we saw and the ruler with which we measured relationships with other countries. It dominated national security policies. It defined our world. Since then, a multitude of lesser-includeds have risen to the top of our foreign and security policy often making them both confusing and contradictory. Yet, for all the discussion, debate and criticism of American foreign policy, the flux in which the same policies of other countries is in, is often overlooked and even more importantly, misunderstood. This series aims to correct that by elucidating the changes and challenges in the foreign and security policies of two major US allies: Germany and Turkey, both of which are key regional powers. The series will will be as follows:
I. Germany Then and Now
II. Turkey: Back in the Neighborhood
If the thousands of books on security and foreign policy flooding stores are any indicator, now more than ever both the American government and Americans themselves need level-headed thinking about where we’re headed. The same is equally true for our allies. Each article will discuss the the changes in each countries policies and their effect on the United States and our relationship with that country. Enjoy!
- BROWSE / IN TIMELINE
- « The Arctic Cold War: The Canadian Perspective
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COMMENTS / ONE COMMENT
El Jefe Maximo added these pithy words on 13 Aug 07 at 3:24 pmI shall indeed be curious what you have to say on these subjects: in my own humble opinion, the Germans were the big winners of the ending of the Cold War, and in European terms, the French were the great losers. I think that the question before the House in Europe is to what degree the EU shall turn into an enterprise run in Berlin ?
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