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NATO-INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS-UNITED STATES (6) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   018613


Evolution of american attitudes toward the Atlantic alliance: Continuity and change from the Washington treaty to NATO enlargem / Schonberg Karl K Winter 2000  Article
Schonberg Karl K Article
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Publication Winter 2000.
Description 1-30
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2
ID:   022833


From Prague to Baghdad: NATO at risk / Talbott Strobe Nov-Dec 2002  Article
Talbott Strobe Article
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Publication Nov-Dec 2002.
Description 46-57
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3
ID:   018519


NATO's open door policy and the next round of enlargement / Hendrickson Ryan C Winter 2000-01  Article
Hendrickson Ryan C Article
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Publication Winter 2000-01.
Description 53-66
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4
ID:   022830


NATO's price / Wallander Celeste A Nov-Dec 2002  Article
Wallander Celeste A Article
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Publication Nov-Dec 2002.
Description 2-8
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5
ID:   023138


Reacting to America / Gnesotto, Nicole 2002  Article
Gnesotto, Nicole Article
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Publication 2002.
Description 99-106
Summary/Abstract One year after 11 September, two things are certain: America's relations with the rest of the world are undergoing fundamental changes; and America is so powerful that those changes are affecting the international system much more drastically than the terrorist attacks themselves. The Europeans in particular have reacted as much to American reactions to terrorism as they have to the terrorist threat itself. This puts the European Union in a difficult position; it must proceed with the daunting project of enlargement, based on the logic of peacetime prosperity and integration, in a new international context of crisis and renewed attention to national sovereignty. A conservative attachment to an unchanged NATO is not the answer, for NATO itself must adapt to a United States that is becoming more unilateralist, more militarist and less interested in its European alliance.
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6
ID:   019086


Starting over again / Bertram Christoph Spring 2001  Article
Bertram Christoph Article
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Publication Spring 2001.
Description 12-14
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