European Regional Integration in the Drafting of the Eastern Pact in 1934–1935: Interests of the Baltic Entente and the Little Entente
This article follows the interests and actions of the countries of Baltic and Little ententes with regard to the projected Eastern Pact, which raised marked interest in East-Central Europe in 1934-1935. It seeks to give an answer to the question whether the negotiations over the Eastern Pact brought...
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The Romanian Association for Baltic and Nordic Studies
2013-08-01
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doaj-60dcfc7fccfa4d518b35519448ae8e9a2020-11-25T03:55:13ZengThe Romanian Association for Baltic and Nordic StudiesRevista Română pentru Studii Baltice şi Nordice2067-17252067-225X2013-08-01513956European Regional Integration in the Drafting of the Eastern Pact in 1934–1935: Interests of the Baltic Entente and the Little EntenteDalia Bukeleviciute0Vilnius UniversityThis article follows the interests and actions of the countries of Baltic and Little ententes with regard to the projected Eastern Pact, which raised marked interest in East-Central Europe in 1934-1935. It seeks to give an answer to the question whether the negotiations over the Eastern Pact brought the interests of the Baltic states closer to those of the Little Entente. It highlights that the progress of negotiations made it clear that each country was more concerned with its security than the common security of the entire bloc, even though both the Little Entente and the Baltic Entente were established for the sake of safeguarding security of their member states and harmonising their foreign policy in this respect. Both regional security bodies declared their agreement to the Eastern Pact but the key difference was that the Baltic Entente was expected to participate in the Eastern Pact directly, whereas only Czechoslovakia was singled out from among the members of the Little Entente. The analysis concludes that Lithuania and Czechoslovakia were the two countries which were most actively concerned with the conclusion of the Eastern Pact.https://f-origin.hypotheses.org/wp-content/blogs.dir/5711/files/2018/12/06.Bukeleviciute.pdforiental pactlittle ententebaltic ententeczechoslovakialithuaniaregional securitycollective security |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Dalia Bukeleviciute |
spellingShingle |
Dalia Bukeleviciute European Regional Integration in the Drafting of the Eastern Pact in 1934–1935: Interests of the Baltic Entente and the Little Entente Revista Română pentru Studii Baltice şi Nordice oriental pact little entente baltic entente czechoslovakia lithuania regional security collective security |
author_facet |
Dalia Bukeleviciute |
author_sort |
Dalia Bukeleviciute |
title |
European Regional Integration in the Drafting of the Eastern Pact in 1934–1935: Interests of the Baltic Entente and the Little Entente |
title_short |
European Regional Integration in the Drafting of the Eastern Pact in 1934–1935: Interests of the Baltic Entente and the Little Entente |
title_full |
European Regional Integration in the Drafting of the Eastern Pact in 1934–1935: Interests of the Baltic Entente and the Little Entente |
title_fullStr |
European Regional Integration in the Drafting of the Eastern Pact in 1934–1935: Interests of the Baltic Entente and the Little Entente |
title_full_unstemmed |
European Regional Integration in the Drafting of the Eastern Pact in 1934–1935: Interests of the Baltic Entente and the Little Entente |
title_sort |
european regional integration in the drafting of the eastern pact in 1934–1935: interests of the baltic entente and the little entente |
publisher |
The Romanian Association for Baltic and Nordic Studies |
series |
Revista Română pentru Studii Baltice şi Nordice |
issn |
2067-1725 2067-225X |
publishDate |
2013-08-01 |
description |
This article follows the interests and actions of the countries of Baltic and Little ententes with regard to the projected Eastern Pact, which raised marked interest in East-Central Europe in 1934-1935. It seeks to give an answer to the question whether the negotiations over the Eastern Pact brought the interests of the Baltic states closer to those of the Little Entente. It highlights that the progress of negotiations made it clear that each country was more concerned with its security than the common security of the entire bloc, even though both the Little Entente and the Baltic Entente were established for the sake of safeguarding security of their member states and harmonising their foreign policy in this respect. Both regional security bodies declared their agreement to the Eastern Pact but the key difference was that the Baltic Entente was expected to participate in the Eastern Pact directly, whereas only Czechoslovakia was singled out from among the members of the Little Entente. The analysis concludes that Lithuania and Czechoslovakia were the two countries which were most actively concerned with the conclusion of the Eastern Pact. |
topic |
oriental pact little entente baltic entente czechoslovakia lithuania regional security collective security |
url |
https://f-origin.hypotheses.org/wp-content/blogs.dir/5711/files/2018/12/06.Bukeleviciute.pdf |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT daliabukeleviciute europeanregionalintegrationinthedraftingoftheeasternpactin19341935interestsofthebalticententeandthelittleentente |
_version_ |
1724469903784673280 |