David Long
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NATO after Atlanticism
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This chapter addresses bipolar disorder in transatlantic relations. It offers a brief account of North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) after the Cold War. The chapter underlines the persistence and relative success of NATO as it reorients its activities and expands its membership in spite of the decline of the threat that called it into existence. It also points out the growing differences that should have made commentators less surprised about the Iraq debacle than they were. The chapter examines the causes of the divisions in the Atlantic Alliance through a consideration of theories purporting to explain what has brought it and kept it together for over half a century. As NATO is both a military alliance and an international organisation, it considers theories of alliance formation as well as the creation and maintenance of international organisations to see whether they explain NATO's continued role in the post-Cold War era.

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The Transatlantic Divide

Foreign and security policies in the Atlantic Alliance from Kosovo to Iraq

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