Lenard J. Cohen
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Managing multilateralism? EU–US relations and the challenges of regime building in South-eastern Europe
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This chapter explores various aspects of the European, American, and North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) engagement in the Balkans over the past fifteen years. It identifies four broad phases in the recent evolution of the relationship between Europe and the US with respect to the Balkans: the twilight of the Cold War; the period from the Dayton Peace Accords in the autumn of 1995 to 9/11, 2001; the period from 9/11 through the Iraq crisis, and up to the end of the first stage of the war in Iraq launched by the US-UK-led coalition on 20 March 2003; and the most recent period of transatlantic relations, i.e. from the prematurely claimed 'end of hostilities' in Iraq on 1 May 2003, through the NATO Istanbul summit in June 2004, and ending with the transfer from NATO to European Union command of peacekeeping forces in Bosnia at the end of 2004.

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The Transatlantic Divide

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

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