Osvaldo Croci
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A tale of two coalitions
Italy faces Kosovo and Iraq
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This chapter examines Italian government choices during the Iraqi crisis. It explains that the foreign policy choices of the Centre-Left coalition in Kosovo and those of the Centre-Right coalition were similar and consistent with well-established trends in Italian foreign policy. The military intervention in Iraq by the US - supported militarily by Great Britain and politically by a 'coalition of the willing' which included a number of European Union (EU) members but not Germany and France - caused a serious split within the Atlantic Alliance and among EU members. Italian diplomatic efforts over the Iraqi issue began during the summer of 2002, when the government launched a joint initiative designed to have both European and Arab countries. During the months preceding military intervention in Iraq, the Italian government undertook an impossible task: to try to rebuild European unity, maintain transatlantic cohesion, and work towards a peaceful resolution of the crisis.

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The Transatlantic Divide

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

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