Abstract

The role of the United States of America in the transformation of the European security architecture after the end of the “Cold War” is examined. A comparative assessment is provided of the approach of the two American administrations to the role of the United States in building the key elements of the European security architecture in the context of a paradigm shift in world development and the transformation of the system of international relations established by treaties and agreements of the Yalta and Potsdam conferences. The analysis allows us to conclude that, remaining the only superpower, the United States considered the architecture of European security as the basis for building a global Eurasian security system. The US decision to transform the European security architecture based on NATO was a successful solution to the “German question” for Washington.

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