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This timely volume assesses NATO's current accomplishments, continuing challenges, and potential pitfalls. Leading international scholars and policymakers explore three key themes influencing NATO's future: transatlantic relations, the debate over enlargement, and the organization's new functions. Weighing the fate of an alliance poised for renewal or decline, the contributors offer informed analysis and discussion of an organization that has changed profoundly over the past five years and continues to evolve in the face of an uncertain global environment.
Philip H. Gordon is senior fellow for foreign policy studies and director, Center on the United States and Europe, the Brookings Institution.
Chapter 1 IntroductionPart 2 Transatlantic Relations After the Cold WarChapter 3 Recasting the Atlantic AllianceChapter 4 Common European Defence and Transatlantic RelationsChapter 5 France's New Relationship with NATOChapter 6 The Masque of InstitutionsPart 7 NATO EnlargementChapter 8 NATO Enlargement: A Framework for AnalysisChapter 9 The Flawed Logic of NATO EnlargementChapter 10 Can Containment Work Again?Chapter 11 NATO Enlargement and the Baltic StatesChapter 12 The Costs of NATO EnlargementPart 13 New FunctionsChapter 14 Combined Joint Task Forces in Theory and PracticeChapter 15 Partnership for Peace: Permanent Fixture or Declining Asset?Chapter 16 NATO's Role in Counter-ProliferationChapter 17 The Western European Union and NATO's 'Europeanisation'
Relevant and important contributions to the debate.