The collapse of communism in Eastern Europe, the unification of Germany, the withdrawal of Soviet troops, the possible disintegration of the Soviet Union, disengagement of the United States and creation of a federal Europe - all this has changed the security context in Europe and stimulated a Europe-wide debate about the future. Questions about the nature of security itself have been raised. The authors question, however, why none of these themes have been raised in Britain? A comparison with Germany shows that there is now a similar spread of party political opinion in the two countries, reflecting a rapid convergence of security interests. "Beyond Deterrence" argues that it is time that there was also a similar level of public debate.
Introduction and Summary - PART 1: THE SETTING - November 9 1989: Five Anomalies in the Post-War European Security System Exposed - The New Agenda: What are the Big Questions Now? - Two Philosophies - PART 2: THE DEBATE - German Politics and the Question of Security 1949-89 - The German Security Debate in the 1990s - The British Defence Debate in the 1980s - The Situation in the 1990s - Outline of the New British Security Debate - PART 3: BEYOND DETERRENCE - Does the Debate Matter? - Index
Hugh Miall, Tom Woodhouse, Oliver Ramsbotham, Christopher Mitchell, Hugh (University of Alberta) Miall, Tom (University of Bradford) Woodhouse, Oliver (University of Bradford) Ramsbotham