Isabelle Facon
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Kosovo and Iraq
Two test cases for the partnership between post-Soviet Russia and the West
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Both North Atlantic Treaty Organization's (NATO) military intervention in Kosovo and the Iraq war mobilised Moscow's anxiety about Washington's leadership in world affairs. In essence, Moscow's apprehension was that 'Operation Allied Force' might be the first example of a type of operation that NATO could be tempted to carry out in the post-Soviet space, or even on Russian territory. 9/11 had helped Moscow consolidate its efforts for a rapprochement with the West, in making its European and US partners more reactive to its cooperation proposals. The Kosovo crisis marked the culmination of Russia's deteriorating ties with the West after a decade of tensions caused by NATO's enlargement and transformation and by Moscow's US-centrism that caused Russian diplomacy to become very hectic, emotional, and reactive. One of the steps that were taken to achieve this goal was making Russian policy towards the West more balanced, i.e. negatively focused on the US.

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The Transatlantic Divide

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

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