This article discusses the three Europes that informed Kissinger’s narrative of world affairs and Transatlantic relations: Europe as history offering vital lessons the USA was called to study and master; Europe as a junior (and subaltern) ally of the USA; Europe as the primary Cold War theater and, in the late 1960s and early 1970s, the object of superpowers’ détente. The article highlights how these three narratives were used in the attempt to build a new domestic consensus around a foreign policy still driven by basic Cold War imperatives, the limits and contradictions of this attempt, and its ultimate failure
For more than sixty years American grand strategy is based on the conviction that external environme...
none1noClemens Von Metternich and Henry Kissinger were two of the most important statesmen of modern...
The article links the tragic historical past of Czechoslovakia, which paid its price for the rejecti...
The article discusses why and how the United States and its North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO...
Little has been written about transatlantic relations during the presidency of Gerald R. Ford. This ...
It has often been remarked that the victors do not merely harvest the fruits of war, but are then si...
The article displays the historical background of the transatlantic relations; the way the United St...
When on 23 April 1973 Henry Kissinger gave a speech proposing a 'Year of Europe' he intended a renew...
The assessment of a contemporary statesman presents difficulties in view of the unpredictability of ...
The Atlantic Century is the first major historical study to re-examine the American-European partner...
While Helmut Schmidt has often been depicted as a ‘reluctant European’ who only came to embrace Euro...
The foundations of American foreign policy, by Henry Kissinger In this account of East-West relation...
This edited volume uses newly released archival material to show linkages between the development of...
The U.S.-European relationship remains the closest and most important alliance in the world. Since 1...
This paper offers an insight into Washington's foreign policy establishment and its vision of E...
For more than sixty years American grand strategy is based on the conviction that external environme...
none1noClemens Von Metternich and Henry Kissinger were two of the most important statesmen of modern...
The article links the tragic historical past of Czechoslovakia, which paid its price for the rejecti...
The article discusses why and how the United States and its North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO...
Little has been written about transatlantic relations during the presidency of Gerald R. Ford. This ...
It has often been remarked that the victors do not merely harvest the fruits of war, but are then si...
The article displays the historical background of the transatlantic relations; the way the United St...
When on 23 April 1973 Henry Kissinger gave a speech proposing a 'Year of Europe' he intended a renew...
The assessment of a contemporary statesman presents difficulties in view of the unpredictability of ...
The Atlantic Century is the first major historical study to re-examine the American-European partner...
While Helmut Schmidt has often been depicted as a ‘reluctant European’ who only came to embrace Euro...
The foundations of American foreign policy, by Henry Kissinger In this account of East-West relation...
This edited volume uses newly released archival material to show linkages between the development of...
The U.S.-European relationship remains the closest and most important alliance in the world. Since 1...
This paper offers an insight into Washington's foreign policy establishment and its vision of E...
For more than sixty years American grand strategy is based on the conviction that external environme...
none1noClemens Von Metternich and Henry Kissinger were two of the most important statesmen of modern...
The article links the tragic historical past of Czechoslovakia, which paid its price for the rejecti...