Type | Journal Article - Central European Journal of International & Security Studies |
Title | Missing Development Opportunities on the EU’s Southern Border |
Author(s) | |
Volume | 3 |
Issue | 2 |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2009 |
URL | http://kms2.isn.ethz.ch/serviceengine/Files/RESSpecNet/110999/ichaptersection_singledocument/8B75EB6D-DE22-4DC2-ABF3-A72F12C11796/en/Chap6.pdf |
Abstract | According to Kennan’s long telegram, permanent peaceful coexistence between the democratic ‘West’ and the communist ‘East,’ (led by the Soviet Union), was next to impossible (Kennan, 1946). However, similar to Soviet ‘offi cial statements,’ Kennan’s assumptions were thinly veiled propaganda, meant for domestic consumption. In hindsight it is clear that despite the multitude of crises, socio-political and economic shocks and disturbances, the relationship between the ‘West’ and ‘East’ was unlikely to have degenerated into an open and direct confrontation. The end of the Cold War did not bring about universal peace, but rather witnessed the emergence of another fault-line, one based more on political identities than geopolitics, but still pointing to a supposedly inevitable confl ict. This time the line of impossible coexistence runs along the border of the Islamic world and a new, expanded ‘West’ which includes the ‘traditional West’ (the US, Canada, West European states, NATO), former Warsaw Pact countries (re: Czech Republic, Slovakia, Poland, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria) and some post-Soviet states (Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia). As Huntington indicated as far back as 1990, we can expect a clash between Islam and the West. |
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