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The Dissolution of the Soviet Union

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The dissolution of the Soviet Union and its satellite Eastern bloc offered a rare opportunity for curtailing certain defense policies and expenditures on the basis of there no longer being an immediate need. The disintegration of the Soviet Union into a series of smaller independent states eliminated one threat and in effect ended European Communism as an international threat. This naturally created a sense of euphoria in the West, but it also contributed to the development of a good deal of confusion and uncertainty. Zielonka notes this when indicating that what followed was a series of vague plans, instant disagreements, and confusion. The security system in Europe was unjust but stable, and both policies and budgets were geared to fighting off any Soviet threat, real or implied. What the West now had to face was the need to find a new policy that would still provide for European security and that would also provide the stability required (Zielonka 127-137).

Remington sees the changes that have taken place in Eastern Europe as altering forever the Europe that originally set out on the road to economic integration, facing as they do a radically changed political economy. Remington predicts that the success or failure of post-Communist Europe's transition to multiparty democracy and market economics will determine whether the European order that takes shape will mirror the vision of 1992 or produce a quagmire of national fragmentation and ethnic conflict (Remington 3

. . .
Some common words found in the essay are:
President Clinton, Eastern Europe, European Communism, United Canada, Soviet Union, North America, IGOs EU, Central Europe, Henry Kissinger, Cooperation Europe, eastern europe, expansion nato, free trade, trade barriers, soviet union,
Approximate Word count = 808
Approximate Pages = 3 (250 words per page)

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