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Allies At War

2010-03-04 
基本信息·出版社:McGraw-Hill ·页码:268 页 ·出版日期:2004年03月 ·ISBN:0071441204 ·International Standard Book Number:0071441204 ·条形码 ...
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 Allies At War


基本信息·出版社:McGraw-Hill
·页码:268 页
·出版日期:2004年03月
·ISBN:0071441204
·International Standard Book Number:0071441204
·条形码:9780071441209
·EAN:9780071441209/0639785387275
·版本:1
·装帧:精装
·正文语种:英语

内容简介 在线阅读本书

A thorough analysis of where U.S./European relations have gone wrong--and how to set them right

We have entered a new age of political engagement, one in which the ideological schism between Europe and the United States has widened to levels not seen since World War II. While many Europeans accuse the U.S. of an overly simplistic, militaristic approach to foreign policy, Europe's reluctance to fully support U.S. efforts against hostile states such as Iraq has led to American mistrust, resentment, and anger.

Written by renowned Brookings Institution fellows Philip Gordon and Jeremy Shapiro, Allies at War examines the current state of the fragile American/European alliance including:

The evolution of NATO in the aftermath of the cold war Tensions exacerbated by President Bush's refusal to ratify, or even recognize, agreements considered vital in Europe Israeli/Palestinian violence, and the sharply different opinions on why it exists and how it can be stopped

Today's increasingly tenuous global environment cries out for reasoned analysis and reasonable answers. Allies at War provides a compelling look at the deepening division in the longstanding U.S./European alliance and presents a solid, studied framework for what must be done--soon
作者简介

Philip H. Gordon, Ph.D., is a senior fellow and Jeremy Shapiro, Ph.D., is an associate director and research fellow with the Brookings Institution. Dr. Gordon has written for prominent publications including the New York Times and appears regularly on CNN, ABC, and other broadcast outlets. Both live in Washington, DC.


专业书评 From the Back Cover

"Masterful ... a timely demonstration that a new transatlantic compact is both possible and necessary for our common security."

--Joseph R. Biden, Jr., Ranking Member, Senate Foreign Relations Committee

A Detailed Examination of What Has Gone Wrong in the Fragile U.S./Europe Alliance--and How to Make It Right

Praise for Allies at War:

"In Allies at War, Phil Gordon and Jeremy Shapiro do a masterful job dissecting the recent rift between the U.S. and Europe over Iraq.  More important, theirs is a timely demonstration that a new transatlantic compact is both possible and necessary for our common security."

--Joseph R. Biden, Jr., Ranking Member, Senate Foreign Relations Committee

"An invaluable and lucid account of the present transatlantic crisis; and a compelling plea for putting that crisis behind us."

--Robert Kagan, Author, Of Paradise and Power: America and Europe in the New World Order

"A deservedly scathing indictment of an arrogantly unilateral policy and a sensible plea for an urgent strategic readjustment."

--Zbigniew Brzezinski, Former National Security Adviser

"Allies at War is a superb but unsettling account of how the most successful alliance in history almost came apart over Iraq.  The Americans and the Europeans have much to learn from this meticulously even-handed account of a crisis both sides badly mishandled."

--John Lewis Gaddis, Yale University

"This is a great book, likely to become the definitive account of this period."

--Charles Grant, Director, Center for European Reform

From the 1956 Suez Crisis to the disputes over US military intervention in Bosnia and Kosovo in the 1990s, the history of the post-World War II American-European alliance is one of nearly continuous diplomatic crisis. Yet, no matter how deep the divisions or bitter the dispute, in the end, the allies always found ways to rise above their differences and preserve the integrity of an alliance which, by the late 1990s, had become the most successful in world history.

The diplomatic wrangling over the war in Iraq produced the worst transatlantic crisis in nearly fifty years, and for the first time leaders in both the United States and Europe are seriously questioning the viability and, indeed, even the value of the alliance. But is this latest crisis really so different from all those that came before it? Is it, as some contend, the culmination of an inevitable process of dissolution that began with the end of the Cold War and became clear after 9/11? Is the fragile American-European alliance and the world order it supports coming unraveled?

In Allies at War distinguished Brookings analysts Philip Gordon and Jeremy Shapiro provides answer to these and other critical questions about the current crisis in American-European relations and its implications for the future.

To help put the current crisis into context the authors trace the evolution of American-European relations since World War II. They describe how deep ideological differences that emerged at the end of the Cold War and disputes over the Balkans, Iran, and Iraq during the Clinton years already had some analysts questioning if the alliance would survive. They explain how the Bush administration's "cowboy diplomacy" helped bring already simmering tensions to a boil. And they provide a detailed, inside account of the events leading up to the Iraq crisis, describing how a series of disastrous diplomatic missteps turned a legitimate disagreement over how to deal with a rogue regime into a crisis that threatened the alliance's very existence.

Finally, in response to those who would say good riddance to an alliance that has given the West fifty years of unprecedented economic and political stability, the authors explain why continued US-European cooperation is essential to global security and prosperity. In an age of terrorism and globalization, they argue, no country or continent, no matter how strong, can stand alone. Allies at War offers concrete prescriptions for mending the rifts that have opened in our relationship and cementing an even stronger alliance--one strong enough to weather the challenges of a post-9/11 world.



From Booklist

Gordon, former director for European affairs at the National Security Council, and Shapiro, who toils alongside Gordon as a research fellow in foreign-policy studies at the Brookings Institution, have composed what is sure to be the first of many such explorations of the breakdown of the Atlantic Alliance over the issue of war with Iraq. They begin with a detailed account of the origins of the alliance in the postwar mid-twentieth century before demonstrating how the alliance was rent by the U.S. insistence on action against the Saddam Hussein regime. The authors are evenhanded--reminding readers of France's rebellious tendencies toward American hegemony as far back as DeGaulle's days. They also castigate Jacques Chirac's ingenuousness for suggesting that France would go along with whatever the UN Security Council voted on the war when he knew all along that France's veto would doom the vote. In general, the authors seem to come down on the side of the U.S. remaining a protector of sorts for Europe, using their forces for the communal good of the alliance. Allen Weakland
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