ID | 086027 |
Title Proper | Germany's Russia question |
Other Title Information | a new ostpolitik for Europe |
Language | ENG |
Author | Stelzenmuller, Constanze |
Publication | 2009. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | Last July, more than 200,000 people flocked to a public park in Berlin to hear Barack Obama, then the Democratic candidate for president of the United States, deliver a speech calling for renewed transatlantic partnership and cooperation. The choice of Germany's long-divided capital as the backdrop for his only public speech in Europe was deliberate. To the Germans listening to him that summer evening in the Tiergarten, Obama made a special appeal, citing "a set of ideals that speak to aspirations shared by all people," the same "dream of freedom" that was the basis of the relationship between the United States and West Germany during the Cold War. Now that Obama is president, will Germany respond to the call and join the United States as a key European partner in addressing global challenges and threats?There are many reasons for Germany to rise to the occasion. For one, there is a dearth of leadership elsewhere in Europe. The European Union remains embroiled in a debate about institutional reform. In the United Kingdom, Prime Minister Gordon Brown -- despite his confidence during the current financial crisis -- remains disengaged from both the EU and the transatlantic alliance. French President Nicolas Sarkozy, meanwhile, shows more Atlanticist inclinations than any of his predecessors, but he has yet to prove that he can build lasting coalitions in Europe or convince his country of the need for economic modernization. |
`In' analytical Note | Foreign Affairs Vol. 88, No. 2;Mar/Apr 2009:p89-100 |
Journal Source | Foreign Affairs Vol. 88, No. 2;Mar/Apr 2009:p89-100 |
Key Words | Germany's - Russia - Question ; New Ostpolitik - Europe ; Economic Modernization ; Barack Obama |