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Note to Readers Note to Readers
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Cite
Extract
In the many months since we began the research that led to this book we have formed debts too extensive to repay here. We are especially grateful to Nadia Schadlow for her encouragement, ideas, and support, as well as to her colleagues at the Smith Richardson Foundation, Marin Strmecki and Allan Song, for providing the grants to the Center for European Policy Analysis (CEPA) where this project was conceived, researched, and written. We are indebted to CEPA chairman Larry Hirsch for his friendship and tireless commitment to deepening U.S. strategic thinking to navigate a more dangerous world. School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) colleagues Charles Doran and Eliot Cohen heard various iterations of arguments presented here and offered support and comments. SAIS deans Vali Nasr and John Harrington also made possible a sabbatical for Jakub that helped when we made our final writing push.
This book would not have come into being without Adam Garfinkle’s agreement to publish an early version of the argument as an article in The American Interest. We’re also grateful to The National In terest for publishing a subsequent article in which many of the recommendations in this book were first aired. We received critical appraisals and suggestions from Aaron Friedberg and Colin Dueck that helped to sharpen key parts of our argument. We are grateful to our colleagues at CEPA, especially Peter Doran and Ilona Teleki, for creating a supportive intellectual environment for creative thinking about Central and Eastern European and global geopolitics, as well as to Milda Boyce at CEPA and Starr Lee at SAIS-JHU for seamless administration, planning, and trips.
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