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Superpower détente during the Nixon-Ford Administration led to the formation of an East-West regime aimed at conflict control and systemic stability. 'Equal Security' was the proclaimed goal. By institutionalizing bipolarity, however, the bilateral US-SU Strategic Arms Limitation Talks actually threatened Western European security, for global security and Alliance security were ultimately incompatible. NATO Europe feared the emergence of a global directorate of the superpowers and became apprehensive that the US would be ready to abandon the cause of Europe and sacrifice European and German…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Superpower détente during the Nixon-Ford Administration led to the formation of an East-West regime aimed at conflict control and systemic stability. 'Equal Security' was the proclaimed goal. By institutionalizing bipolarity, however, the bilateral US-SU Strategic Arms Limitation Talks actually threatened Western European security, for global security and Alliance security were ultimately incompatible. NATO Europe feared the emergence of a global directorate of the superpowers and became apprehensive that the US would be ready to abandon the cause of Europe and sacrifice European and German unity for the sake of a stable world order. In reaction, NATO Europe sought to shape the SALT process to ensure that equal security applied to all - the Soviet Union, the United States and the European Allies. The volume analyses the linkages between SALT, MBFR, NATO and the special Anglo-American nuclear relationship. It also explores how NATO Europe penetrated US decision-making and co-shaped the US SALT agenda and how Scoop Jackson Democrats and NATO Europe aligned to preserve Western block superiority, freezing the SALT II process. Based on recently declassified European archival material, the volume offers a fresh interpretation of and a 'new look' at SALT.
Autorenporträt
Ralph Dietl, Studium der Zeitgeschichte an der Eberhard Karls Universität Tübingen sowie der Washington University St Louis. Promotion zur Aussenpolitik von W. J. Bryan in Tübingen, Lehrtätigkeit an der Bergischen Universität Wuppertal, am King's College London und seit 2003 als Universitätsdozent für Europäische und Internationale Geschichte an der School of Politics, Philosophy and International Studies der Queen's University Belfast. Forschungsschwerpunkte: Geschichte der Internationalen Beziehungen bzw. internationaler Organisationen (Vereinte Nationen, NATO und europäische Institutionen). Ralph Dietl, Studium der Zeitgeschichte an der Eberhard Karls Universität Tübingen sowie der Washington University St Louis. Promotion zur Aussenpolitik von W. J. Bryan in Tübingen, Lehrtätigkeit an der Bergischen Universität Wuppertal, am King's College London und seit 2003 als Universitätsdozent für Europäische und Internationale Geschichte an der School of Politics, Philosophy and International Studies der Queen's University Belfast. Forschungsschwerpunkte: Geschichte der Internationalen Beziehungen bzw. internationaler Organisationen (Vereinte Nationen, NATO und europäische Institutionen).
Rezensionen
"Dietl hat eine originelle, facettenreiche und quellenstarke Darstellung zu einem Thema vorgelegt, das für die Geschichte des Ost-West-Konflikts, der transatlantischen Beziehungen und Westeuropas nach 1945 von herausragendem Gewicht ist" Andreas Lutsch Sehepunkte 14, 2014/2