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Journal ArticleDOI

Nuclear disarmament: Consequences for the alliance—Perspectives for Germany and Europe

Alfred Dregger
- 01 Jan 1988 - 
- Vol. 7, Iss: 4, pp 335-343
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TLDR
In this article, the implications of the intermediate-range nuclear forces (INF) agreement for European security from the point of view of the CDU/CSU in Europe are analyzed.
Abstract
This paper analyzes the implications of the intermediate‐range nuclear forces (INF) agreement for European security from the point of view of the CDU/CSU in Europe The Atlantic Alliance has shared common values and an interest in preventing the Soviet Union from subsuming Western Europe under its sphere of influence Germany's security aim, within the Alliance, is to prevent the regionalization of war—whether nuclear or nonnuclear—in its territory through the risk‐sharing and deterrence‐sharing of the Alliance Thus, in the light of the INF agreement, grave difficulties arise for Germany's security aims, owing to the significance devolving upon short‐range systems, and conventional and chemical weapons Various responses are discussed, including NATO's development of a comprehensive concept (Gesamtkonzept,) for disarmament, the Western European Union for military and other aid and assistance, and a European economic and monetary union which, with the European security union, would form the polit

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Citations
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The rebirth of a world power? German unification and the future of European security

TL;DR: A thorough examination of the role of Germany in the European states system from 1648 to the present can be found in this article, which analyzes the past, present, and future of German power, paying particular attention to the evolution of diplomacy and statecraft between Germany and the great powers in the period 1987-1990.
Book ChapterDOI

Western Europe between Soviet Threat and American Guarantee

TL;DR: This was the premise of all defence planning of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO), as stated here in a ‘Top Secret Cosmic’ document (that is, hardly a public propaganda document but the foundation of serious planning) of 1954 as mentioned in this paper.
Book ChapterDOI

The Federal Republic of Germany: Sin and Redemption

TL;DR: From the creation of the Federal Republic of Germany (FRG) until the end of the Cold War, its governments thought it needed the protection of a strong alliance with nuclear weapons against aggression from the Soviet Union and its allies.