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The Baltic policy of Germany and current international relations
Author(s) -
Alexey Salikov,
Ilia N. Tarasov,
Evgeniy Urazbaev
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
baltijskij region
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2310-0532
pISSN - 2074-9848
DOI - 10.5922/2074-9848-2016-1-5
Subject(s) - current (fluid) , baltic sea , political science , international relations , regional science , geography , economy , economics , geology , politics , oceanography , law
This article analyses the Baltic policy of united Germany from the 1990s until today. The authors set out to identify the significance of German-Baltic relations and the role of the Eastern policy in Russian-German relations. The method of dynamic comparison between the political and economic narrative in intergovernmental relations makes it possible to identify distinctive features of Germany’s Baltic policy in the context of current international relations. In particular, it is noted that Germany was most active in the Baltic region in the 1990s, when the country was establishing political, economic, and cultural ties with the new independent states. In the second half of the 1990s, Germany’s foreign policy became less intense. After the accession of Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia to the EU and NATO in 2004, certain disagreements started to arise between Germany and the Baltics. It explains the lukewarm relations between them. The Ukraine events brought about a change in Germany’s regional policy. Despite Russia remaining one of the key economic and political counteractors, Germany, being a partner of the Baltics in the EU and NATO, cannot adopt a neutral position in the conflict of interests between the Baltics and Russia.\u

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