1. 1. For similar analyses, see C. Gasteyger, ‘The Remaking of Eastern Europe’s Security’, Survival, XXXIII (1991) pp. 111–24; J.M.O. Sharp, ‘Security Options for Central Europe in the 1990s’, in B. Crawford (ed.), The Future of European Security (University of California, Berkeley: Center for German and European Studies, 1992) pp. 54–78; A.G.V. Hyde-Price, ‘After the Pact: East European Security in the 1990’s, Arms Control, 12 (September 1991) pp. 279–302; and J. Orme, ‘Security in East Central Europe: Seven Futures’, The Washington Quarterly, 14 (Summer 1991) pp. 91–105.
2. 2. S. Crow, ‘“Who Lost Eastern Europe?”’, Report on the USSR, 3 (12 April 1991) pp. 1–5.
3. 4. S. Crow, international Department and Foreign Ministry Disagree on Eastern Europe’, Report on the USSR, 3 (21 June 1991) pp. 4–8.
4. 5. ‘The Links That Bind’, Chapter 4 in K. Dawisha, Eastern Europe, Gorbachev and Reform: The Great Challenge, 2nd ed. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1990) pp. 81–124.
5. 6. G. Urban, ‘How to set Hungary free’, The Times (14 March 1989); W.C. Clemens, Jr., ‘Promote an Austrian Solution for Eastern Europe’, International Herald Tribune (10 July 1989); I. Kristol, ‘Why Not Neutralize Eastern Europe?’, International Herald Tribune (13 September 1989); R.A. Bitzinger, ‘Neutrality for Eastern Europe: Problems and Prospects’, Bulletin of Peace Proposals, 22 (1991) pp. 281–9; and S. Kux, ‘Neutrality and New Thinking’, Chapter 5 in R.E. Kanet, D. Nutter Miner, and T.J. Resler, Soviet Foreign Policy in Transition (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1992) pp. 100–17.