Surmounting the Global Crisis critiques the impact of NATO enlargement and the US 'pivot to Asia' on both the Russia and China and examines how these dual US-backed policies may influence key countries in the Euro-Atlantic, wider Middle East, and Indo-Pacific regions in general.Prologue: Soviet Collapse and the Rise of China 1.Breaking the Contemporary Impasse 2.The Failure to Reach US-Soviet, US-Russian Accords 3.The Reactivation of Containment 4.Ramifications of the August 2008 Georgia-Russia War 5.Missile Defences in the Euro-Atlantic, 'Wider Middle East' and Indo-Pacific 6.The Perils of the US 'Pivot' to Asia 7.Surmounting the Geostrategic Dimensions of the Transatlantic Financial Crisis 8.Toward a New Europe and World-Wide System of Regional Peace and Development Communities
'Hall Gardner's book touches upon one of the crucial turning points in post-Cold War history: the failure of Western leaders and particularly of several US administrations to build stable strategic relations with the post-Soviet Russia. The unilateral expansion of NATO to the East perceived by Moscow more as a political humiliation than a strategic challenge is used by Vladimir Putin to justify his new 'Eurasian' strategy and his search for allies in the East. Gardner considers that there is still time to repair the damage and proposes non-conventional answers to the security challenges of the new century.' - Andrei Grachev, last official spokesman of Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev, Chairman of the Scientific Committee of the New Policy Forum
'Hall Gardner's contribution to scholarship on the relationship dynamics between Europe, Asia, and Russia is well established. This book takes a further step. Gardner proposes an unprecedented architecture for world governance, which goes against established clich?s and views.' - Roberto Savio, Inter Press Service
'NATO Expansion and US Strategy in Asia is an impressive and complex book. It provides a synl³8