Alex Macleod
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Competing for leadership in West European defence
France, Great Britain and the wars in Kosovo and Iraq
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This chapter examines what leadership means for two middle-sized powers which both aspire to be recognised as states with global responsibilities, and the strategies they have used to maintain this status. It looks at how Britain and France applied these strategies during two vital periods for the future of European defence, the conflict in Kosovo and the US-UK invasion of Iraq. It will be argued that in the final analysis, British and French aspirations to lead the emerging European Security and Defence Policy (ESDP) are closely linked to managing their relationship with the US. Most of the measures laid out in the Berlin compromise had been adopted. For the British, the vital point was to clarify the European Union (EU)-North Atlantic Treaty Organization institutional arrangements and to limit both the evolution towards the setting up of a totally autonomous EU military headquarters and a two-speed ESDP.

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The Transatlantic Divide

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

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