Synopses & Reviews
Lantis examines continuity and change in German foreign policy in the decade since unification. Between 1949 and 1990, the Federal Republic of Germany pursued one of the most consistent foreign policy patterns of any Western power. Restrictions on an assertive German military posture became deeply rooted in the public psyche, in foreign policy tradition, and in the Basic Law. However, the end of the Cold War, the collapse of the Soviet Union, and the unification of Germany have fundamentally changed the international and domestic parameters of German foreign policy. A review of contemporary developments shows that a dramatic evolution of German foreign policy is currently underway—from checkbook diplomacy in the Gulf War to the humanitarian relief mission in the Horn of Africa, and from Contact Group diplomacy to airstrikes in Kosovo.
To explore this evolution of German foreign policy since unification, Lantis presents an innovative model of external-internal linkages derived from two important areas of scholarship on the role of international crises as catalysts for foreign policy change and the importance of domestic political conditions that ultimately determine the scope and pace of such change. Five original case studies place German political debates about how best to respond to challenges of the post-Cold War era in social and historical context by drawing on discursive analyses of government documents, parliamentary debates, and elite interviews. These cases illustrate the rise of a new consensus on the political left for engagement in global affairs, reinterpretations of historical lessons for contemporary German policy, and the constitutional challenges of global activism since unification. Of particular interest to scholars, students, and researchers involved with German politics, international security policy, and comparative foreign policy.
Review
There seems little doubt that the study of German foreign policy will be a growth industry for some time to come.International History Review
Review
[t]his book is worth reading....[h]elps to explain Germany's reluctance to join the invading coalition and its willingness actively to oppose, for the first time, a major foreign policy decision of the United States.Political Science Quarterly
Synopsis
Examines German foreign policy in the decade since unification.
Synopsis
Lantis examines continuity and change in German foreign policy in the decade since unification. Case studies of German responses to challenges from the Persian Gulf War to Kosovo illustrate the constitutional challenges of global activism since unification and the rise of a new consensus on the German political left for engagement in global affairs.
About the Author
JEFFREY S. LANTIS is Chair of the International Relations Program and Associate Professor of Political Science at The College of Wooster. He is author of Domestic Constraints and the Breakdown of Internaional Agreements (Praeger, 1997) and Foreign Policy in Comparative Perspective.
Table of Contents
Preface
The Evolution of German Foreign Policy
The Persian Gulf Crisis and Checkbook Diplomacy
Peacekeeping and Humanitarian Relief Operations in Somalia
Diplomacy and Delay: The Civil War in the Former Yugoslavia
Action and Engagement: The Bosnia Crisis
Coercive Diplomacy and the Crisis in Kosovo
German Foreign Policy for the 21st Century
Bibliography
Index