1st Edition
NATO in the Cold War and After Contested Histories and Future Directions
Introduction - NATO: Past & Present
Sergey Radchenko, Timothy Andrews Sayle and Christian Ostermann
1. ‘Nothing but humiliation for Russia’: Moscow and NATO’s eastern enlargement, 1993-1995
Sergey Radchenko
2. Eastbound and down: The United States, NATO enlargement, and suppressing the Soviet and Western European alternatives, 1990–1992
Joshua R. Itzkowitz Shifrinson
3. The overlooked importance of economics: why the Bush Administration wanted NATO enlargement
Liviu Horovitz and Elias Götz
4. An uncertain journey to the promised land: The Baltic states’ road to NATO membership
Andres Kasekamp
5. Debating détente: NATO’s Tindemans Initiative, or why the Harmel Report still mattered in the 1980s
Susan Colbourn
6. A nuclear education: the origins of NATO’s Nuclear Planning Group
Timothy Andrews Sayle
7. The zero option and NATO’s dual-track decision: Rethinking the paradox
Andreas Lutsch
8. Visions of the next war or reliving the last one? Early alliance views of war with the Soviet Bloc
Jeffrey H. Michaels
9. NATO’s inherent dilemma: strategic imperatives vs. value foundations
Ruud van Dijk and Stanley R. Sloan
Biography
Sergey Radchenko is Wilson E. Schmidt Distinguished Professor, School of Advanced International Studies, Johns Hopkins University, USA.
Timothy Andrews Sayle is Assistant Professor, Department of History, University of Toronto, Canada.
Christian F. Ostermann is Director of the History and Public Policy Program, Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, USA.






