This book examines European history and politics between two very well-known but flawed treaties: The Treaty of Versailles and the Treaty of Maastricht.
Taking the Treaty of Versailles, signed following World War I, as a starting point, the volume argues that while it was well-intentioned to the point of being utopian, it was also totally impractical, rearranging the map of Europe in a way which led to the tragic descent into conflict and barbarism in World War II. The volume then moves through the post war period, the outcome of the war producing the uneasy stability of a Cold War divided continent, and with the establishment of NATO in 1949, the process of European integration ushered in the era of cooperation. Under the influence of Charles de Gaulle, the newly created European Community acted as an association of sovereign states led by France and Germany, spurring economic growth and encouraging other countries to apply to join. After de Gaulle’s retirement in 1969, this approach was progressively abandoned in favour of a federal model of integration in which member states transferred their sovereignty to the institutions of what became the European Union. Europe was to be transformed from a continent to a country. The book concludes by analysing the Maastricht treaty, which enshrined this process, as being as fatally flawed as the Versailles Treaty and charts the post-Maastricht slow decline of the European Union giving way to widespread Euroscepticism.
From the Treaty of Versailles to the Treaty of Maastricht will appeal to researchers and students alike interested in European history, politics and World War I and II.
Author(s): Martin Holmes
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2022
Language: English
Pages: 268
City: London
Cover
Half Title
Endorsements
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1. The legacy of the Versailles Treaty
2. Mussolini’s ‘Roman Empire’
3. Stresemann to Hitler: German foreign policy
4. The Spanish Civil War: International implications
5. Soviet foreign policy, 1918–1941
6. Chamberlain, Churchill and the appeasement debate
7. Diplomatic and military objectives of the Axis powers
8. The diplomatic and military objectives of the Allied powers
9. Origins of the Cold War in Europe, 1945–1949
10. Cold War America asserts its power: Anglo-French humiliation at Suez, 1956
11. The origins of European integration after 1945
12. Why the UK did not join EEC in the 1950s
13. 1973 enlargement: The UK joins the EEC
14. 1973 Enlargement: Denmark and Ireland join, but Norway says ‘no’
15. De Gaulle to Brandt: European relations with the US, NATO and the USSR
16. From customs union to the Werner Report, 1957–1970
17. The 1970s crisis and the abandonment of the Werner Plan
18. Delors, German unification and Eastern Europe
19. Thatcher: Resisting Delors and opposing Maastricht
Epilogue
Select Bibliography
Index