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Journal of Cold War Studies

Quarterly
(Winter, Spring, Summer, Fall)
192 pp. per issue, 6 x 9
Founded: 1999
ISSN 1520-3972
E-ISSN 1531-3298

Journal of Cold War Studies

Fall 2000, Vol. 2, No. 3, Pages 4-68
Posted Online March 13, 2006.
(doi:10.1162/15203970051032192)
© 2000 President and Fellows of Harvard College and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology

De Gaulle Between Grain and Grandeur: The Political Economy of French EC Policy, 1958–1970 (Part 2)

Andrew Moravcsik

Professor of government and a faculty associate of the Center for European Studies, Harvard University



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The concluding segment of this two-part article explores two key episodes in French foreign policy under President Charles de Gaulle: (1) France's veto of British membership in the European Economic Community (EEC), and (2) de Gaulle's decisions to provoke and then resolve the “empty chair” crisis of 1965–1966. These two cases, like the two examined in Part 1 of this article, demonstrate the fundamental importance of economic considerations in de Gaulle's policy toward the EEC. De Gaulle was a democratic politician first and a geopolitical visionary second. His experience tells us a great deal about the limits imposed by modern democratic politics on any leader who might hope to make statecraft serve an idiosyncratic political vision. The article concludes with an analysis of possible counterarguments and a discussion of the proper use of historical evidence.

Cited by

Robert H. Lieshout , Mathieu L. L. Segers , Anna M. van der Vleuten. (2004) De Gaulle, Moravcsik, and The Choice for Europe: Soft Sources, Weak Evidence. Journal of Cold War Studies 6:4, 89-139
Online publication date: 1-Oct-2004.
Abstract | PDF (241 KB) | PDF Plus (244 KB) 
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