학술논문

Energy diplomacy: West Germany, the Soviet Union and the oil crises of the 1970s
Document Type
Text
Author
Source
Historical Social Research, 39(4)
Subject
Internationale Beziehungen
Politikwissenschaft
Geschichte
spezielle Ressortpolitik
allgemeine Geschichte
internationale Beziehungen, Entwicklungspolitik
Bundesrepublik Deutschland
Erdgas
Erdöl
alte Bundesländer
Energieversorgung
Krise
Energiepolitik
Kalter Krieg
wirtschaftliche Zusammenarbeit
Kernenergie
UdSSR
Wirtschaftspolitik
Entspannungspolitik
Ostpolitik
Diplomatie
History
International relations
Political science
Special areas of Departmental Policy
International Relations, International Politics, Foreign Affairs, Development Policy
General History
crude oil
old federal states
energy supply
economic cooperation
Federal Republic of Germany
natural gas
crisis
policy of détente
cold war
energy policy
economic policy
nuclear energy
USSR
diplomacy
Language
English
Abstract
This article analyzes West German energy policy and negotiations with the Soviet Union during the Cold War. Archival sources from the West German government show that long-term energy diplomacy became a carefully built link which guaranteed cooperation even during political crises,such as the one in 1980/81. This article argues that energy diplomacy catalyzed Brandt’s Ostpolitik. In particular, natural gas pipelines implied mutual trust within a stable relationship, which led to further collaborations, including cooperation in nuclear power. It points out that, from this perspective, 1973 was not exactly a turning point, and some grandiose plans in the years after the first oil crisis failed. Furthermore the article shows how the second oil crisis in 1979 increased cooperation cooperation between West Germany and the Soviet Union, although this strained West Germany’s relationship with the United States. Archival documents reveal that energy policy matters remained wellcalculated and persistent. Thus, the Soviet Union became a more reliable partner than many Arab countries.