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Max Otte

    October 7, 1964
    Endlich mit Aktien Geld verdienen
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    Der Onvista-Führer zur Aktienanalyse
    The United States, Japan, West Germany and Europe in the international economy 1977 - 1987
    A rising middle power?
    Statesman of Europe
    • 2020

      Statesman of Europe

      • 752 pages
      • 27 hours of reading
      4.2(19)Add rating

      A NEW STATESMAN BOOK OF THE YEAR 2020 'The lamps are going out all over Europe. We shall not see them lit again in our life-time.' The words of Sir Edward Grey, looking out from the windows of the Foreign Office in early August 1914, are amongst the most famous in European history, and encapsulate the impending end of the nineteenth-century world. The man who spoke them was Britain's longest-ever serving Foreign Secretary (in a single span of office) and one of the great figures of late Victorian and Edwardian Britain. Statesman of Europe is a magnificent portrait of an age and describes the three decades before the First World War through the prism of his biography, which is based almost entirely on archival sources and presents a detailed account of the main domestic and international events, and of the main personalities of the era. In particular, it presents a fresh understanding of the approach to war in the years and months before its outbreak, and Grey's role in the unfolding of events.

      Statesman of Europe
    • 2000

      Max Otte contends that Germany is on its way to becoming a normal power, albeit one with rather limited power potential. According to Otte, contemporary Germany is a saturated, status-quo oriented, and risk-averse nation with three major security interests (in this order): security partnership with the United States, European integration, and stability in Eastern Europe and Russia.

      A rising middle power?