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The New Foreign-Policy Pendulum: Geopolitical Codes of German Foreign Policy in the Post-bipolar World Order
Author(s) -
Rebin Fard
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
politics in central europe
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.166
H-Index - 6
eISSN - 2787-9038
pISSN - 1801-3422
DOI - 10.2478/pce-2019-0022
Subject(s) - geopolitics , foreign policy , german , political science , foreign policy analysis , political economy , international relations , politics , economy , sociology , law , economics , geography , archaeology
This article deals with the question of how German foreign policy can be characterized from a geopolitical perspective in an era in which the constellation of world politics is undergoing change, as evidenced by the conflict in Ukraine, shift in US foreign policy under President Trump and the on-going Brexit negotiations. In order to identify changes in the geopolitical orientation of German foreign policy and sketch a profile of German foreign policy, the article includes official German government documents. It can be concluded from the study that the geopolitical codes of German foreign policy are of a varying character, and can be characterized into three geopolitical spatial structures: the Atlantic, European and Eurasian regions. In terms of the geopolitical orientation of German foreign policy, the Federal Government develops German strategy in a multipolar world system, in which it aims to turn Europe into a world power. While the continued existence of NATO remains a goal of German foreign policy, the Federal Government, in unison with France, seeks a multipolar world order, in which Germany and France assume leading roles within the European spatial structure, and are liberated from US supremacy in the transatlantic spatial structure.

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