In recent years, historians have devoted much attention to the prominent role played by the major Western European powers - in primis France and the Federal Republic of Germany - in stabilising the troubled Southern European scenario of the mid-1970s through the power of economic and political attraction exerted by the European Economic Community (EEC). This chapter adds another element to this picture, offering a historical reappraisal of Western European stabilisation policy towards Yugoslavia between 1974 and 1976. This work argues that, mutatis mutandis, Western European goals towards Greece and Portugal - political stabilisation and strengthening of economic links with the Western system - also concerned Yugoslavia, whose independence vis-à-vis the Soviet Union was regarded as a major precondition for the stability of the whole Mediterranean region.
Assessing Yugoslavia's place in western european stabilisation policies in Southern Europe, 1974-1976
Benedetto Zaccaria
2016-01-01
Abstract
In recent years, historians have devoted much attention to the prominent role played by the major Western European powers - in primis France and the Federal Republic of Germany - in stabilising the troubled Southern European scenario of the mid-1970s through the power of economic and political attraction exerted by the European Economic Community (EEC). This chapter adds another element to this picture, offering a historical reappraisal of Western European stabilisation policy towards Yugoslavia between 1974 and 1976. This work argues that, mutatis mutandis, Western European goals towards Greece and Portugal - political stabilisation and strengthening of economic links with the Western system - also concerned Yugoslavia, whose independence vis-à-vis the Soviet Union was regarded as a major precondition for the stability of the whole Mediterranean region.I documenti in ARCA sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.