NATO’s Enlargement and Russia. Группа авторов

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      ibidem-Press, Stuttgart

      Contents

       Foreword A Europe “Whole and Free” Will Not Be Possible Without Russia

       Note by the Series Editor

       Introduction

       Looking for Historical Unlocking Issues of Strategic Stability

       Nuclear Deterrence A Guarantee or Threat to Strategic Stability?

       50 Years Ago: Kennedy, Brandt, Nixon A Model for 21st Century Statecraft?

       A “Great Prize,” But Not the Main Prize British Internal Deliberations on Not-Losing Russia, 1993–1995

       The Clinton Administration and Reshaping Europe

       Russia and NATO Security Guarantees as a Strategic Challenge for Central and Eastern Europe

       Central European Security and Russia

       The Ukraine Conflict Lessons for NATO, Kyiv and Their Future Relations

       Damage Control The Breach of the Budapest Memorandum and the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Regime

       Lost and Real Chances in Western-Ukrainian-Russian Relations An Interview

       Russia as a Security Challenge of Tomorrow Some Clues

       Strategic Decentering Moscow’s Ideological Rhetoric and its Strategic Unconscious, 2012–2020

       Foundations of Current and Future Security Relations Between Russia and NATO Member States Narratives, Capabilities, Perceptions and Misperceptions

       Cooperation vs. Confrontation German-Russian Security Relations Between Geopolitical Poles

       On the Misperception of Russia’s Foreign and Security Policies

       Russian Military Policy and Moscow’s Approach Towards the West

       Concluding Remarks

      A Europe “Whole and Free” Will Not Be Possible Without Russia

      Vladimir V. Kara-Murza

      Three decades on, the results of NATO’s response to that challenge have been mixed—as testified to by the questions posed in this volume, edited by Oxana Schmies, that brings together some of the best strategic minds from both coasts of the Atlantic and both sides of the former Iron Curtain. On the one hand, NATO enlargement has been a resounding success, doubling the number of member states and expanding the zone of freedom and security to an extent unimaginable by participants of that December meeting. On the other hand, it has proven to be a dismal failure, having led to a new dynamic of confrontation between the Western alliance and Russia—Europe’s largest country, without which the celebrated goal of a Europe “whole and free” is unachievable by definition.

      This question—of Russia’s place in Europe and in the Euro-Atlantic community writ large—is central to any discussion about NATO (and, although this falls outside the scope of this volume, European Union) enlargement, with regard to both analyzing the past and preparing for the future. Indeed, these two goals are closely connected: studying past mistakes is a prerequisite for avoiding their repeat.

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