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The Future of NATO Expansion: Four Case Studies

The Future of NATO Expansion: Four Case Studies

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Zoltan Barany
Cambridge University Press, 10/9/2003
EAN 9780521821698, ISBN10: 052182169X

Hardcover, 278 pages, 23.6 x 16 x 2.6 cm
Language: English

In 1999 three East-Central European states (Poland, Hungary, and the Czech Republic) gained membership in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. Professor Barany argues that, once it began, the Alliance should continue the enlargement process. Nevertheless he maintains that only states that satisfy NATO's membership criteria should be allowed to join. Through an extensive analysis of four countries, Bulgaria, Romania, Slovakia, and Slovenia who, at the time of the book's original publication in 2003 were NATO aspirants, Barany demonstrates that they were in several important respects unprepared for membership and that there was no pressing reason for NATO's haste. Barany argues that while NATO should be clear that its doors remain open to qualified candidates, the Alliance should hold off further expansion until prospective members will become assets rather than liabilities.

Introduction
1. The pros and cons of (further) enlargement
2. Slovakia
catching up to its neighbors
3. Slovenia
a regional leader
4. Romania
twelve years of disappointment
5. Bulgaria
progress after seven wasted years
Conclusion
comparing the candidates.