Abstract
With the end of the Cold War Eastern Europe is confronting a serious security deficit: with few and weak capacities these countries have to meet new and old internal and external threats. This chapter is about the security agenda in Eastern Europe. It begins with an analysis of the post-Cold War context and the profile of new security threats in Eastern Europe. The efforts made in Eastern Europe are articulated in the general concern for a new security architecture in Europe. First, national security policies and bilateral and regional security arrangements are analysed; then options for the integration of Eastern Europe into a security regime based on the existing security structures are considered.
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