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The imperial temptation : the new world order and America's purpose
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The imperial temptation : the new world order and America's purpose

Author: Robert W Tucker; David C Hendrickson
Publisher: New York : Council on Foreign Relations Press, ©1992.
Edition/Format:   Book : EnglishView all editions and formats
Summary:
With communism in retreat following the sudden end of the cold war, America's brand of democracy appeared triumphant around the world. Yet, paradoxically, the United States was left floundering for a new global agenda. In this critical analysis of American foreign policy priorities, Robert W. Tucker and David C. Hendrickson argue that the Bush administration, in its attempts to address the challenges posed by the  Read more...
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Details

Document Type: Book
All Authors / Contributors: Robert W Tucker; David C Hendrickson
ISBN: 0876091184 9780876091180 0876091168 9780876091166
OCLC Number: 25315811
Description: ix, 228 p. ; 23 cm.
Contents: Introduction: Two Victories --
Pt. 1. America's Road to the New World Order. 1. The Bush Administration and the End of Containment. 2. The New World Order. 3. Aggression and Collective Security. 4. Visions of Order: Past and Present --
Pt. 2. The Gulf War: An Autopsy. 5. The Costs of the War. 6. The Justification for the War. 7. The Motive for the War. 8. The Case for Punitive Containment. 9. Proliferation and Preventive War. 10. Time as an Enemy. 11. Justice and the War. 12. The Responsibilities of Victory. 13. The Redemption of Vietnam. 14. The Faustian Bargain --
Pt. 3. American Security and the National Purpose. 15. The Original Understanding. 16. The Age of Uncertainty. 17. The Cold War Consensus. 18. The End of the Cold War. 19. Paradoxes of the Gulf War. 20. Renovation.
Responsibility: Robert W. Tucker, David C. Hendrickson.
More information:

Abstract:

With communism in retreat following the sudden end of the cold war, America's brand of democracy appeared triumphant around the world. Yet, paradoxically, the United States was left floundering for a new global agenda. In this critical analysis of American foreign policy priorities, Robert W. Tucker and David C. Hendrickson argue that the Bush administration, in its attempts to address the challenges posed by the new global realities, has betrayed the fundamental ideals on which this country was founded. Taking the gulf war as their starting point, Tucker and Hendrickson dissect President Bush's vision of a new world order, exposing its inconsistency with America's traditional diplomatic principles. They criticize Bush's all-out military assault on Iraq as a disproportionate and inhumane response to the crisis. By using force to resolve the gulf crisis when other means were available--for example, a policy of "punitive containment"--and then walking away from the ruin created by the war, Bush succumbed to an "imperial temptation" that has seduced and corrupted other great powers in the past. Tucker and Hendrickson make a compelling argument that U.S. foreign policy should return to the guiding principles set forth by the Founding Fathers. They maintain that these principles offer a far better guide for dealing with the perils and opportunities facing America today than Bush's foreign policy agenda. They believe that the nation has developed an attitude toward the use of force that is both unnecessary and irresponsible, and they advocate a foreign policy for the coming generations that would protect America's vital interests while remaining faithful to the nation's traditional ideals. The Imperial Temptation makes an important--and what is sure to be viewed as controversial--contribution to the national debate over the future of U.S. foreign policy and offers a revealing examination of the classic ideas underlying American diplomacy and their relation to the nation's historic purpose.

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Linked Data


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