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Towards Mutual Security

E-BookPDF0 - No protectionE-Book
477 Seiten
Englisch
Vandenhoeck & Ruprechterschienen am22.01.20141. Auflage
The Munich Security Conference, founded as 'Wehrkundetagung' in 1963, has evolved into the leading independent forum for security policy. Traditionally seen as a kind of transatlantic family meeting for debating NATO strategy during the Cold War, the conference has increasingly broadened its agenda and today attracts participants from across the globe. Each year, dozens of heads of state and government, ministers, and experts from different fields of security policy gather in Munich for an open exchange of ideas and policies on the most pressing international security issues - ranging from regional conflicts, international peace operations and nuclear disarmament to cyber security and environmental challenges. On the occasion of the conference's 50th anniversary in 2014, a number of prominent participants, including former and current foreign and defense ministers, reflect on the conference's history and significance, some of the major issues debated, and on key security challenges facing the international community.

Wolfgang Ischinger ist seit 2008 Vorsitzender der Münchner Sicherheitskonferenz und berät die Allianz SE. Der Karrierediplomat war u.a. Leiter des Planungsstabs, Politischer Direktor und Staatssekretär im Auswärtigen Amt sowie deutscher Botschafter in den USA und im Vereinigten Königreich.
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Produkt

KlappentextThe Munich Security Conference, founded as 'Wehrkundetagung' in 1963, has evolved into the leading independent forum for security policy. Traditionally seen as a kind of transatlantic family meeting for debating NATO strategy during the Cold War, the conference has increasingly broadened its agenda and today attracts participants from across the globe. Each year, dozens of heads of state and government, ministers, and experts from different fields of security policy gather in Munich for an open exchange of ideas and policies on the most pressing international security issues - ranging from regional conflicts, international peace operations and nuclear disarmament to cyber security and environmental challenges. On the occasion of the conference's 50th anniversary in 2014, a number of prominent participants, including former and current foreign and defense ministers, reflect on the conference's history and significance, some of the major issues debated, and on key security challenges facing the international community.

Wolfgang Ischinger ist seit 2008 Vorsitzender der Münchner Sicherheitskonferenz und berät die Allianz SE. Der Karrierediplomat war u.a. Leiter des Planungsstabs, Politischer Direktor und Staatssekretär im Auswärtigen Amt sowie deutscher Botschafter in den USA und im Vereinigten Königreich.
Details
Weitere ISBN/GTIN9783647300542
ProduktartE-Book
EinbandartE-Book
FormatPDF
Format Hinweis0 - No protection
FormatE107
Erscheinungsjahr2014
Erscheinungsdatum22.01.2014
Auflage1. Auflage
Seiten477 Seiten
SpracheEnglisch
Dateigrösse58174 Kbytes
Illustrationenmit 59 Abbildungen sowie einem 16-seitigen z.T. farbigen Tafelteil
Artikel-Nr.13864090
Rubriken
Genre9201

Inhalt/Kritik

Inhaltsverzeichnis
1;Cover
;1
2;Title Page
;4
3;Copyright
;5
4;Table of Contents
;6
5;Body
;12
6;Acknowledgments;12
7;Anniversary Messages;14
7.1;Angela Merkel: Message from the Federal Chancellor to Mark the Fiftieth Anniversary of the Munich Security Conference;16
7.2;Joseph R. Biden: Congratulating the Munich Security Conference on Fifty Years of Contributions to Transatlantic Security;20
7.3;Wolfgang Reitzle: The 50th Munich Security Conference - Security Policy in the Era of Globalization;24
8;The Chairmen;28
8.1;Wolfgang Ischinger: Towards Mutual Security: From Wehrkunde to the Munich Security Conference;30
8.2;Horst Teltschik: The Munich Conference on Security Policy - Continuity and Change;38
8.3;John McCain: Remembering Ewald von Kleist;46
8.4;Peter C. Hughes and Theresa M. Sandwith: Ewald-Heinrich von Kleist: The Man behind Wehrkunde;50
9;Wehrkunde and the Cold War;80
9.1;Theo Sommer in Conversation with Helmut Schmidt;82
9.2;Lothar Rühl: The Discussions in the Critical Period of the East-West Conflict from the Mid-Sixties to the Early Nineties;94
9.3;Uwe Nerlich: Wehrkunde and the Transatlantic Nuclear Discourse;104
9.4;Egon Bahr: The Shorter the Range, the Deader the Germans ;114
9.5;Karl Kaiser: NATO´s Double-Track Decision, the Peace Movement, and Arms Control;120
9.6;Richard Burt: Wehrkunde and the End of the Cold War;130
9.7;Sam Nunn: Countering Nuclear Threats: From Cold War Wehrkunde to Today´s Munich Security Conference;134
10;New Challenges after the End of the Cold War;142
10.1;Carl Bildt: Why Didn´t We Stop the Bosnia War Earlier? Thoughts and Lessons;144
10.2;Ulrich Weisser: From the Fall of the Berlin Wall to the Admission of New Members to NATO;152
10.3;Klaus Naumann: The 1999 Munich Conference on Security Policy-Paving the Way for the Kosovo Air Campaign Operation Allied Force;162
10.4;Rudolf Scharping: Key Meetings at the Margins-Kosovo and the Munich Conference;168
10.5;George Robertson: The Margins at Munich: The Conference from Kosovo to Iraq;172
10.6;James L. Jones: The Munich Security Conference in the Post-9/11 Era;194
10.7;Kerstin Müller: The Iraq War and the Transatlantic Rift;202
10.8;Javier Solana: Capacity for Adaptation: The Munich Conference and European Security;210
11;Euro-Atlantic Security in a Globalized World;218
11.1;John Kerry: Transatlantic Ties That Must Still Bind;220
11.2;Guido Westerwelle: Peace and Security in Germany, Europe, and the World;224
11.3;Thomas de Maizière: The Transatlantic Partnership-The Foundation of German Security Policy;232
11.4;Chuck Hagel: The Munich Security Conference at Fifty: The Challenge of Change;240
11.5;Anders Fogh Rasmussen: Keeping NATO Strong;246
11.6;James Stavridis: NATO: Quo Vadis?;252
11.7;Ruprecht Polenz: The United States, Europe, and a Pivot to Reality;260
11.8;Constanze Stelzenmüller: Indispensable Partners in an Uncertain World;270
11.9;Frank-Walter Steinmeier: Euro-Atlantic Security: Before and after the Reset ;276
11.10;Igor S. Ivanov: The Munich Security Conference and the Russia-NATO Relationship;286
11.11;Volker Perthes: Enter the Arab People: The Munich Security Conference, the Middle East, and the Arab Revolts;294
11.12;Omid Nouripour: Not the Whole Picture: The History of the Incomplete Answer to Iran´s Nuclear Threat;304
11.13;Kevin Rudd: Europe, the United States, and the Rise of the Asia-Pacific;312
11.14;Eberhard Sandschneider: Asia´s Rise and Asia´s Risks;320
11.15;Nikolaus von Bomhard: Climate Change and Its Impact on Security;326
11.16;Friedbert Pflüger: The Shifting Geopolitics of Energy-The Green and Shale Revolution;336
11.17;Jane Harman: Moving the Conversation Forward on Nuclear Disarmament;346
11.18;Anne-Marie Slaughter: To Tweet or Not to Tweet? The Impact of Social Media on Global Politics;352
11.19;Keith B. Alexander: The New Frontier: Cyberspace and International Security;358
11.20;Toomas Hendrik Ilves: Cyberspace and International Security;368
12;Spotlights on the Conference;374
12.1;Joseph I. Lieberman: A Constant Reminder of the Transatlantic Alliance´s Strategic and Moral Imperative;376
12.2;Hans-Ulrich Klose: Good Arguments Are What Matters;380
12.3;William S. Cohen: Little Patience for Frivolous Speeches-A Personal Remembrance of Wehrkunde and Ewald-Heinrich von Kleist;384
12.4;Charles Powell: The Munich Security Conference: A British Perspective;388
12.5;Jim Hoagland: The German-American Relationship Remains at the Conference´s Heart;394
12.6;Stefan Kornelius: Talking Points. The Conference between Genuine Debate, Catwalk,
and Public Ambiguity;400
12.7;Ulrich Wilhelm: From Munich to the World:Broadcasting the MSC;406
12.8;Catherine McArdle Kelleher: I Didn´t Know They Were Letting Girls Go to Wehrkunde ;410
12.9;Klaus Wehmeier and Thomas Paulsen: The Munich Young Leaders;416
12.10;Josef Joffe: Fasching, Family Reunions, and Hard Power. The Munich Security Conference, the Alliance, and International Security-A Very Personal Remembrance;420
13;Mutual Security in the Twenty-First Century;426
13.1;Joseph S. Nye, Jr.: The Future of Power inthe Twenty-First Century;428
13.2;Strobe Talbott: Atlanticism in the Era of Globalization;434
13.3;François Heisbourg: The Future Isn´t What It Used to Be;452
13.4;Rados aw Sikorski: Munich Security Conference 1963-2063: The European Union as a Superpower?;464
14;Appendix;470
15;Image Credits;490
16;List of Abbreviations;492
17;Back Cover
;495
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