This important new study provides a critical analysis of the foreign
policies conducted during the first two terms of Tony Blair's
government. It focuses upon the government's key foreign policy
commitments; three of its most important international relationships
(with the US, the European Union, and Africa); and how Blair's
government dealt with five fundamental policy issues (political economy,
defence, international development, intervention, and Iraq). It argues
that throughout this period Labour's foreign policies attempted to paper
over some important contradictions.