1998
DOI: 10.1080/01636609809550295
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NATO expansion: The anatomy of a decision

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Cited by 29 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…Gorbachev tested the idea of NATO membership a couple of times in a prudent manner, for instance during the German reunification talks with US Secretary of State James Baker in May 1990 (Sarotte, ). Also President Yeltsin, for instance in September 1993, made clear that Russia had an interest in joining NATO (Goldgeier, , p. 88). Even President Putin in his first term was potentially interested in ‘a broader participation’ in NATO (Lyne, , p. 4).…”
Section: Missed Opportunity In the Post‐cold War Period: Unfulfilled mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Gorbachev tested the idea of NATO membership a couple of times in a prudent manner, for instance during the German reunification talks with US Secretary of State James Baker in May 1990 (Sarotte, ). Also President Yeltsin, for instance in September 1993, made clear that Russia had an interest in joining NATO (Goldgeier, , p. 88). Even President Putin in his first term was potentially interested in ‘a broader participation’ in NATO (Lyne, , p. 4).…”
Section: Missed Opportunity In the Post‐cold War Period: Unfulfilled mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The latter included the promise by NATO not to station nuclear weapons or foreign troops on a permanent basis in the former Warsaw Pact countries. Earlier, President Clinton had promised President Yeltsin that eventually a democratic Russia could become part of NATO (in line with the neoconservative and neoliberal argumentation à la Fukuyama) and stated that in the meantime NATO expansion would not threaten Russia's interests (Goldgeier, , p. 97). The latter clearly showed a lack of understanding of how Russia perceived the situation.…”
Section: Nato Expansion and The Balkan Warsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, Waltz (2000a) observes that America's championing of NATO expansion is also explained by the Clinton's failures in Bosnia: "With the administration's Bosnian policy in trouble, Clinton needed to show himself to be an effective leader in foreign policy" (p. 30). Such vision is also reinforced by Goldgeier (1998) who reminds that "Clinton needed to demonstrate US leadership. His administration's foreign policy in Bosnia was failing miserably, and this failure overshadowed every other foreign policy issue at that time" (pp.…”
Section: Clinton's Foreign Policymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…118 Clinton told Lake that he was impressed with their vehemence, and supported enlargement from that moment. 119 Clinton was open to these appeals, because they ªtted with the drive to expand market democracy and modernize alliances.…”
Section: How the Blob Prevented Changementioning
confidence: 99%