NATO: A Guide to the Issues
By (Author) Brian J. Collins
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
1st February 2011
United States
General
Non Fiction
Public international law: international organizations and institutions
355.031091821
Hardback
192
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
454g
This superb introduction to NATO is written for the national security novice, yet is full of insights for the more seasoned hand interested in how and why NATO reached its current state. In the more than half-century since NATO was founded, there has been endless debate about its purpose, about whether it is meeting that purpose, and about the strategies it employs to that end. Speculation has also been rife about the organization's "imminent demise." Those questions and more are the subject of NATO: A Guide to the Issues. Covering the organization from its founding in 1949 through the present, the guide examines aspects of NATO that have undergone tremendous change over the years, including its purpose, military mission, geographic concept of operations, and membership. At the same time, it explores key aspects of NATO's organization that have remained constant. These include the ability of members to participate in operations as much or as little as they desire, decision-making by consensus, and a general belief that people from different countries working together on a daily basis promotes cooperation, understanding, and friendship.
Brian J. Collins is an Air Force officer currently on the faculty of the Industrial College of the Armed Forces at the National Defense University.