Military Alliances in the Twenty-First Century. Alexander Lanoszka
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СКАЧАТЬ They have opened up a diverse set of competing views and ideas relevant to the issues explored in this book. With all that said, I bear full responsibility for any infelicities and errors that sneaked into the finished product.

      Lastly, I would like to thank my wife, Emmanuelle Richez, for her extensive support and enthusiasm for the project, even if it meant enduring some of my long discourses over meals (what she would call “rants”). The writing of this book also overlapped with the arrival, and the first year in this crazy world, of our son Maximilien. This book is dedicated to him. His coming into our lives, the pandemic, and the writing of the book almost perfectly coincided in their timing. It was strange to be effectively in lockdown for such a long stretch of time, but he made the experience so much better for us.

      Windsor, Ontario

      Few may have realized it at the time, but 2008 was arguably the watershed year for how the United States managed its military alliances around the world. The first major event to be considered here took place in the Romanian capital of Bucharest, where leaders of all twenty-six North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) member states gathered to discuss the future of the alliance. One key item on the agenda was whether to extend Membership Action Plans (MAPs) to Georgia and Ukraine, a move that, if approved, would set those countries on the path toward full membership. Under George W. Bush’s leadership, the United States advocated strongly for their inclusion. Getting endorsement from Washington was a big deal for Georgia and Ukraine. After all, thanks largely to the United States, other East Central European countries like Poland and Latvia had been able to become NATO members in the previous decade. Yet, despite Washington’s record of consistently getting what it wanted with NATO enlargement, this time was different. At the summit in Bucharest, France and Germany pushed back against the US initiative, in part because they did not wish to antagonize Russia, which was opposed to those countries’ prospective membership in NATO. As NATO makes decisions based on full consensus, Georgia and Ukraine ended up being denied those MAPs that they had coveted so much. Several months later, in August, Georgia fought a brief war with Russia. The pro-Western coalition government ruling Ukraine at the time collapsed one month later.

      All the basic themes in alliance politics that this book explores figured in the events of that one year, 2008. Those events have reverberations that carry through to the present day. The United States sought to form new official alliance partnerships by way of enlarging NATO further, only to be rejected by some of its longstanding partners out of fear of being entrapped in disputes with Russia they did not wish to have. Amid the fallout of a terrible economic crisis, allies began to worry that the United States might loosen its commitments to them, thereby stoking fears of abandonment. Some Obama administration officials – most notably, Secretary of Defense Robert Gates – would indeed later chastise US allies for free-riding and call for more equitable burden-sharing. Part of the frustration that Gates articulated emerged from the US experience in Afghanistan, where the NATO-led mission saw not only greater US troop numbers, but European partners placing caveats that inhibited the military effectiveness of their own national forces. The wars in both Iraq and Afghanistan were examples of coalition warfare that saw the participation of some US allies and partners, but not others. Still, the geopolitical shifts produced by the 2008 financial crisis suggested that some alliances could eventually come to an end, if the United States was no longer able or willing to support them. Of course, no alliance was ever truly at risk of being revoked during the Obama administration, but how sustainable such commitments could be and whether some should be terminated became increasingly a matter of debate.