Volume XXXV, No. 3
July - September 2000
Editorial Note
Opinions
De-Balkanising the Balkans: What Priorities?
Ivan Krastev
While important new international schemes have been launched for the Balkans in the last
year, they are aimed almost exclusively at economic and institutional problems and neglect
security aspects, since dealing with the latter would touch on delicate political
questions. But these strategies can hardly be implemented in an insecure environment; and
at the same time, economic recovery and democratisation cannot bridge the security gap.
Addressing the security question calls for radical reconsideration of both the democratic
agenda and the agenda of integration with Europe, putting the focus squarely on
state-building and enforcement of the rule of law.
Iran in the Balance
Alberto Negri
Enigmatic Iran is once again giving the lie to predictions. What was hailed as the new
revolution following the general elections early this year is slowly being turned around
by entrenched power structures and vested interests. Whether or not the country can
undergo a soft transition towards a pluralist system basically depends on the
conservatives and their willingness to continue to play the parliamentary game. Though the
regime has already lost its real source of legitimacy, it remains to be seen whether
Khatamis offer of a new legitimacy based on parliamentary democracy will be enough
to find a non-traumatic way out of Khomeinis revolution.
TEPSA Europe Forum
A Test Bed for Enhanced
Cooperation: the European Defence Industry
Michele Nones
While a series of decisions have been taken by European actors in recent years to
strengthen capacities in the field of defence, the progress made in integrating defence
markets on the supply side must now be matched by similar progress on the demand side.
Here a number of stumbling blocks still persist, created mainly by the specific
connotations of the 15 national markets. The objective is to do away with these and give
the current rationalisation process, which has already taken some important steps, a real
European and transnational dimension.
Essays
Italian Foreign Policy Survey
The Öcalan Affair Revisited
Roberto Aliboni and Daniela Pioppi
After Italys rather awkward handling of Abdullah Ocalans unexpected visit to
Italy in December 1998, later phases of the crisis involving the Kurdish leader, while
initially causing a deterioration in Turkish relations with Greece and the European Union,
eventually led to a rapprochement with both and the admission of Turkeys candidature
to the EU in December 1999
Italy's Approach to UN Security Council Reform
Marco Pedrazzo
Reform of the composition of the UN Security Council to provide equitable representation
of the organisations members in the new century has been a very sluggish process.
Italy has played an active role and is now advocating a solution which envisages a new
category of rotating non-permanent members, as opposed to a simple increase in the numbers
of either of the existing categories, permanent or non-permanent. It is also in favour of
a European Union seat on the Council, which could, if approved by the EU member states and
not opposed by the members of the Security Council, be achieved without reform of the
Charter.
Transatlantic Relations in Flux
Strengthening the Atlantic Political Order
G. John Ikenberry
The end of the Cold War and the emergence of the American unipolar power are straining the
Western political order. In order to preserve and expand transatlantic cooperation, both
Europe and the US must first recognise that such an order exists a system of
institutions deliberately created with a positive vision of relations among Western
countries in mind and then work to strengthen these institutions, in the knowledge
that they can make the exercise of power more restrained and routinised, but that they can
also make that power more durable, systematic and legitimate.
The US Post-Imperial Presidency and Transatlantic Relations
David P. Calleo
The remaining global hegemon, the US, now finds itself with an excess of power, once
created and mobilised against the enemy. But the combination of this and the
recent decline in presidential power does not make for a good imperial
function in a globalised world system. It seems unlikely that the world will
continue to be unipolar in the future; a new world order must make room for new powers and
contain them in a rule-based system of shared risks and responsibilities. The European
Union itself suggests the advantages of shared hegemonies. Europes efforts to
establish a collective and more self-sufficient defence should, therefore, be welcomed
instead of hindered.

NBC Arms Control Under Stress
Alexander Kelle
While a certain optimism prevailed in the early nineties, control regimes for nuclear,
biologial and chemical (NBC) weapons increasingly came under pressure in the second half
of the decade. The article briefly reviews the state of implementation of the various
regimes and warns of the seriousness of the challenges facing them.
Book Reviews and Notes
An Autonomous
Foreign Policy for a Changing Italy
Patrick McCarthy
IAI Library Note
Maritza Cricorian
|