<DIV><P>Throughout the postwar era a special relationship between France and Germany has often been the catalyst for European integration. The two countries have achieved jointly the leadership that neither could sustain alone. However the Soviet collapse has presented them with a new agenda of problems. German unification has resurrected old geopolitical fears and has had disruptive economic consequences. Central European states are struggling to transform themselves into liberal democracies with market economies and clamoring to join the European Union posing a formidable challenge to its practical cohesion organizational patterns and economic resources. Events in the former Yugoslavia have lent urgency to the need for decisive action on enlargement and exposed the fragility of Europe&apos;s capacity for collective military action. The Franco-German response has been to deepen the EU while proceeding slowly on enlarging to the east. The partners have pursued their monetary goal with extraordinary fortitude and most observers believe they will achieve it in 1999. However opinion is deeply divided over the wisdom or sustainability of such a course. This book explores how these issues are currently understood by French and German elites who have generated the current policies and are carrying them out. The essays--by three French three German and two American authors--reveal an impressive consensus as well as widely differing views. They analyze the broad diplomatic security and economic dimensions of the bilateral relationship. The contributors are Gilles Andr&#233;eacute;ani. Klaus-Peter Klaiber Fran&#231;ois Heisbourg Michael St&#252;uuml;rmer Jean-Pierre Landau Ernst Welteke and Patrick McCarthy. SAIS European Studies</P></DIV>
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