000 01666cam a2200205 4500
100 1 _aALLIN Dana H.
700 _aJONES Erik
245 _aSleepwalking to solidarity?
_bRussia, Ukraine and the European dream/
_cDana H. Allin & Erik Jones
260 _c2022
520 _aEuropeans' awakening to a new reality of East-West confrontation, driven home by Russia's invasion of Ukraine, has fed the accusation that they must have been asleep, much as they were before the First World War. Many view Germany's complacency in particular - manifested by its promotion of energy dependence on Russia - as inexcusable. However somnolent it may have been at times, though, Europe's vision of peace and prosperity has proven resilient. When Vladimir Putin invaded Ukraine, he foreclosed complacent introspection. While Russia's permanent isolation is not a viable endgame for Europe or the United States, its isolation may be unavoidable for a generation or more. But Europe has, in living memory, fostered the rebirth of a ravaged continent as a prosperous and forward-looking civilisation. In alliance with America, it can again be master of its own fate.
650 _aBELARUS
_xEUROPEAN UNION (EU)
_xFIRST WORLD WAR
650 _aGLOBALISATION
_xMARINE LE PEN
_xALEXANDER LUKASHENKO
_xEMMANUEL MACRON
650 _aNATO
_xPOPULISM
650 _aVLADIMIR PUTIN
_zRUSSIA
650 _aSECOND WORLD WAR
_xUKRAINE
_xSTEFAN ZWEIG
773 _aSurvival:
_gVol.64, No.3, June-July 2022, pp.213-222 (106)
598 _aRUSSIA, EUROPE, NATO, EU
856 _uhttps://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/00396338.2022.2078059
_zClick here for full text
945 _i69098.1001
_rY
_sY
999 _c42193
_d42193