Defense Policy in the North Atlantic Alliance: The Case of the Netherlands
By (Author) Jan W. Honig
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th January 1993
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
International institutions
355.031091821
Hardback
280
Who defines defence policy in the North Atlantic Alliance Is it NATO, the national government, or the national military Dutch scholar Jan Willem Honig addresses this issue. His conclusion, which runs counter to the conventional wisdom that NATO is highly influential, is that the decisive influence in defining defence policy lies neither with NATO nor the allied governments but with the individual national military establishments. He argues that the Alliance does not possess the powers or the institutional framework to effectively control or steer allied defense policies. Honig's conclusion challenges conventional wisdom. He analyses the issue in a detailed case study of the Netherlands' defense policy between 1949 and 1991. Because the fabric of Western security is undergoing its most radical transformation since NATO's inception, this study is useful for its analysis of the changing parameters of European defence requirements. Policy makers and academics interested in NATO should find this work illuminating.
JAN WILLEM HONIG teaches in the department of Liberal Studies at New York University. He was until recently a MacArthur post-doctoral research fellow at the Department of War Studies, King's College, London and a research associate at the Institute for East-West Security Studies in New York.