"All the certainties about Europe learned over the past five decades now must be reexamined in the light of the Cold War. In no other area is this more true than in questions regarding the future of European security. Carl Hodge's Redefining European Security brings together a talented group of experts from both North America and Europe to provide a broad, readable and highly useful assessment of the security challenges facing Europe as well as the national and institutional responses to them. It provides an essential road map to anyone seeking to understand the changing European terrain." -- Stephen Szabo, Professor of International Studies, The Johns Hopkins University "In this carefully constructed, wider-ranging review of the area, its institutions, major national actors and issues, Carl Hodge has made a significant contribution to our understanding of the revolution in European affairs that has occurred in the last decade of the twentieth century. It is a marvelous collection with an insightful blend of theory and reality, disparate approaches and points of view and more than a modicum of common sense about the circumstances and expectations of both Europe and the world. It is one of the best chronicles that I have seen on the momentous experiment to reshape the landscape, institutions and contentious issues of the Cold War and the implications of the choices being made." -- Grant T. Hammond, Professor of International Relations, Air War College
Introduction: Crucial Problems of Security in Europe PART 1: THE OLD AND THE NEW CHAPTER 1 European Security Between the “Logic of Anarchy” and the “Logic of Community” CHAPTER 2The Revival of Geopolitics in Europe CHAPTER 3 The Economic Elements of the European Security Order CHAPTER 4 A Separate Peace? Economic Stabilization and Development and the New Fault Line of European Security CHAPTER 5 Transnational Threats and European Security PART 2: PRINCIPAL PLAYERS CHAPTER 6 France’s Security Policy since the End of the Cold War REDEFINING EUROPEAN SECURITY CHAPTER 7 France and the Organization of Security in Post–Cold War Europe CHAPTER 8 Redefining European Security: The Role of German Foreign Policy CHAPTER 9 Germany: Is Sound Diplomacy the Better Part of Security? CHAPTER 10 Russia and European Security CHAPTER 11 The Future of American Atlanticism PART 3: THE MULTILATERAL DIMENSION, HARD AND SOFT CHAAPTER 12 The Military Aspects of European Security CHAPTER 13 Between Ambition and Paralysis: The European Union’s Common Foreign and Security Policy and the War in the Former Yugoslavia CHAPTER 14 The OSCE: Nonmilitary Dimensions of Cooperative Security in Europe Conclusion: Where Is Europe?