It’s 25 years this month since Poland, the Czech Republic and Hungary were invited to join Nato. The Spectator’s cover story that week was this essay by Susanne Eisenhower, president of the Eisenhower Group and granddaughter of President Eisenhower. Explore The Spectator’s archive here.
Washington, DC
When historians, decades from now, consider the 20th century they will probably be struck by how the major conflicts of the century were ultimately resolved. At the century’s end, Germany, the country that wreaked more destruction on the world than any other power, is economically prosperous, unified and firmly locked within Nato — all due to the magnanimity of its victors. The Russians, on the other hand, enter the new millennium ‘defeated’ and excluded from the two most important European institutions the EU and Nato. Worse still, Russia is adrift without the benefit of any comprehensive Western plan for its integration, even though it has courageously expelled the communists from power and voluntarily brought an end to the Soviet empire.
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