| THINK AGAIN |
The
Eagle Has Crash Landed
Pax
Americana is over. Challenges from Vietnam and the Balkans to the Middle
East and September 11 have revealed the limits of American supremacy. Will
the United States learn to fade quietly, or will U.S. conservatives resist
and thereby transform a gradual decline into a rapid and dangerous fall? |
By Immanuel Wallerstein The
United States in decline? Few people today would believe this assertion.
The only ones who do are the U.S. hawks, who argue vociferously for
policies to reverse the decline. This belief that the end of U.S. hegemony
has already begun does not follow from the vulnerability that became
apparent to all on September 11, 2001. In fact, the United States has been
fading as a global power since the 1970s, and the U.S. response to the
terrorist attacks has merely accelerated this decline. To understand why
the so-called Pax Americana is on the wane requires examining the
geopolitics of the 20th century, particularly of the century’s final
three decades. This exercise uncovers a simple and inescapable conclusion:
The economic, political, and military factors that contributed to U.S.
hegemony are the same factors that will inexorably produce the coming U.S.
decline. Intro to
hegemony
The
rise of the United States to global hegemony was a long process that began
in earnest with the world recession of 1873. At that time, the United
States and Germany began to acquire an increasing share of global markets,
mainly at the expense of the steadily receding British economy. Both
nations had recently acquired a stable political base—the United States
by successfully terminating the Civil War and Germany by achieving
unification and defeating France in the Franco-Prussian War. From 1873 to
1914, the United States and Germany became the principal producers in
certain leading sectors: steel and later automobiles for the United States
and industrial chemicals for Germany. The
history books record that World War I broke out in 1914 and ended in 1918
and that World War II lasted from 1939 to 1945. However, it makes more
sense to consider the two as a single, continuous “30 years’ war”
between the United States and Germany, with truces and local conflicts
scattered in between. The competition for hegemonic succession took an
ideological turn in 1933, when the Nazis came to power in Germany and
began their quest to transcend the global system altogether, seeking not
hegemony within the current system but rather a form of global empire.
Recall the Nazi slogan ein tausendjähriges Reich (a thousand-year
empire). In turn, the United States assumed the role of advocate of
centrist world liberalism—recall former U.S. President Franklin D.
Roosevelt’s “four freedoms” (freedom of speech, of worship, from
want, and from fear)—and entered into a strategic alliance with the
Soviet Union, making possible the defeat of Germany and its allies. World
War II resulted in enormous destruction of infrastructure and populations
throughout Eurasia, from the Atlantic to the Pacific oceans, with almost
no country left unscathed. The only major industrial power in the world to
emerge intact—and even greatly strengthened from an economic
perspective—was the United States, which moved swiftly to consolidate
its position. But
the aspiring hegemon faced some practical political obstacles. During the
war, the Allied powers had agreed on the establishment of the United
Nations, composed primarily of countries that had been in the coalition
against the Axis powers. The organization’s critical feature was the
Security Council, the only structure that could authorize the use of
force. Since the U.N. Charter gave the right of veto to five
powers—including the United States and the Soviet Union—the council
was rendered largely toothless in practice. So it was not the founding of
the United Nations in April 1945 that determined the geopolitical
constraints of the second half of the 20th century but rather the Yalta
meeting between Roosevelt, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill, and
Soviet leader Joseph Stalin two months earlier. The
formal accords at Yalta were less important than the informal, unspoken
agreements, which one can only assess by observing the behavior of the
United States and the Soviet Union in the years that followed. When the
war ended in Europe on May 8, 1945, Soviet and Western (that is, U.S.,
British, and French) troops were located in particular
places—essentially, along a line in the center of Europe that came to be
called the Oder-Neisse Line. Aside from a few minor adjustments, they
stayed there. In hindsight, Yalta signified the agreement of both sides
that they could stay there and that neither side would use force to push
the other out. This tacit accord applied to Asia as well, as evinced by
U.S. occupation of Japan and the division of Korea. Politically,
therefore, Yalta was an agreement on the status quo in which the Soviet
Union controlled about one third of the world and the United States the
rest. Washington
also faced more serious military challenges. The Soviet Union had the
world’s largest land forces, while the U.S. government was under
domestic pressure to downsize its army, particularly by ending the draft.
The United States therefore decided to assert its military strength not
via land forces but through a monopoly of nuclear weapons (plus an air
force capable of deploying them). This monopoly soon disappeared: By 1949,
the Soviet Union had developed nuclear weapons as well. Ever since, the
United States has been reduced to trying to prevent the acquisition of
nuclear weapons (and chemical and biological weapons) by additional
powers, an effort that, in the 21st century, does not seem terribly
successful. Until
1991, the United States and the Soviet Union coexisted in the “balance
of terror” of the Cold War. This status quo was tested seriously only
three times: the Berlin blockade of 1948–49, the Korean War in
1950–53, and the Cuban missile crisis of 1962. The result in each case
was restoration of the status quo. Moreover, note how each time the Soviet
Union faced a political crisis among its satellite regimes—East Germany
in 1953, Hungary in 1956, Czechoslovakia in 1968, and Poland in 1981—the
United States engaged in little more than propaganda exercises, allowing
the Soviet Union to proceed largely as it deemed fit. Of
course, this passivity did not extend to the economic arena. The United
States capitalized on the Cold War ambiance to launch massive economic
reconstruction efforts, first in Western Europe and then in Japan (as well
as in South Korea and Taiwan). The rationale was obvious: What was the
point of having such overwhelming productive superiority if the rest of
the world could not muster effective demand? Furthermore, economic
reconstruction helped create clientelistic obligations on the part of the
nations receiving U.S. aid; this sense of obligation fostered willingness
to enter into military alliances and, even more important, into political
subservience. Finally,
one should not underestimate the ideological and cultural component of
U.S. hegemony. The immediate post-1945 period may have been the historical
high point for the popularity of communist ideology. We easily forget
today the large votes for Communist parties in free elections in countries
such as Belgium, France, Italy, Czechoslovakia, and Finland, not to
mention the support Communist parties gathered in Asia—in Vietnam,
India, and Japan—and throughout Latin America. And that still leaves out
areas such as China, Greece, and Iran, where free elections remained
absent or constrained but where Communist parties enjoyed widespread
appeal. In response, the United States sustained a massive anticommunist
ideological offensive. In retrospect, this initiative appears largely
successful: Washington brandished its role as the leader of the “free
world” at least as effectively as the Soviet Union brandished its
position as the leader of the “progressive” and “anti-imperialist”
camp. One, Two, Many
Vietnams
The
United States’ success as a hegemonic power in the postwar period
created the conditions of the nation’s hegemonic demise. This process is
captured in four symbols: the war in Vietnam, the revolutions of 1968, the
fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989, and the terrorist attacks of September
2001. Each symbol built upon the prior one, culminating in the situation
in which the United States currently finds itself—a lone superpower that
lacks true power, a world leader nobody follows and few respect, and a
nation drifting dangerously amidst a global chaos it cannot control. What
was the Vietnam War? First and foremost, it was the effort of the
Vietnamese people to end colonial rule and establish their own state. The
Vietnamese fought the French, the Japanese, and the Americans, and in the
end the Vietnamese won—quite an achievement, actually. Geopolitically,
however, the war represented a rejection of the Yalta status quo by
populations then labeled as Third World. Vietnam became such a powerful
symbol because Washington was foolish enough to invest its full military
might in the struggle, but the United States still lost. True, the United
States didn’t deploy nuclear weapons (a decision certain myopic groups
on the right have long reproached), but such use would have shattered the
Yalta accords and might have produced a nuclear holocaust—an outcome the
United States simply could not risk. But
Vietnam was not merely a military defeat or a blight on U.S. prestige. The
war dealt a major blow to the United States’ ability to remain the
world’s dominant economic power. The conflict was extremely expensive
and more or less used up the U.S. gold reserves that had been so plentiful
since 1945. Moreover, the United States incurred these costs just as
Western Europe and Japan experienced major economic upswings. These
conditions ended U.S. preeminence in the global economy. Since the late
1960s, members of this triad have been nearly economic equals, each doing
better than the others for certain periods but none moving far ahead. When
the revolutions of 1968 broke out around the world, support for the
Vietnamese became a major rhetorical component. “One, two, many
Vietnams” and “Ho, Ho, Ho Chi Minh” were chanted in many a street,
not least in the United States. But the 1968ers did not merely condemn
U.S. hegemony. They condemned Soviet collusion with the United States,
they condemned Yalta, and they used or adapted the language of the Chinese
cultural revolutionaries who divided the world into two camps—the two
superpowers and the rest of the world. The
denunciation of Soviet collusion led logically to the denunciation of
those national forces closely allied with the Soviet Union, which meant in
most cases the traditional Communist parties. But the 1968 revolutionaries
also lashed out against other components of the Old Left—national
liberation movements in the Third World, social-democratic movements in
Western Europe, and New Deal Democrats in the United States—accusing
them, too, of collusion with what the revolutionaries generically termed
“U.S. imperialism. The
attack on Soviet collusion with Washington plus the attack on the Old Left
further weakened the legitimacy of the Yalta arrangements on which the
United States had fashioned the world order. It also undermined the
position of centrist liberalism as the lone, legitimate global ideology.
The direct political consequences of the world revolutions of 1968 were
minimal, but the geopolitical and intellectual repercussions were enormous
and irrevocable. Centrist liberalism tumbled from the throne it had
occupied since the European revolutions of 1848 and that had enabled it to
co-opt conservatives and radicals alike. These ideologies returned and
once again represented a real gamut of choices. Conservatives would again
become conservatives, and radicals, radicals. The centrist liberals did
not disappear, but they were cut down to size. And in the process, the
official U.S. ideological position—antifascist, anticommunist,
anticolonialist—seemed thin and unconvincing to a growing portion of the
world’s populations. The
Powerless Superpower The
onset of international economic stagnation in the 1970s had two important
consequences for U.S. power. First, stagnation resulted in the collapse of
“developmentalism”—the notion that every nation could catch up
economically if the state took appropriate action—which was the
principal ideological claim of the Old Left movements then in power. One
after another, these regimes faced internal disorder, declining standards
of living, increasing debt dependency on international financial
institutions, and eroding credibility. What had seemed in the 1960s to be
the successful navigation of Third World decolonization by the United
States—minimizing disruption and maximizing the smooth transfer of power
to regimes that were developmentalist but scarcely revolutionary—gave
way to disintegrating order, simmering discontents, and unchanneled
radical temperaments. When the United States tried to intervene, it
failed. In 1983, U.S. President Ronald Reagan sent troops to Lebanon to
restore order. The troops were in effect forced out. He compensated by
invading Grenada, a country without troops. President George H.W. Bush
invaded Panama, another country without troops. But after he intervened in
Somalia to restore order, the United States was in effect forced out,
somewhat ignominiously. Since there was little the U.S. government could
actually do to reverse the trend of declining hegemony, it chose simply to
ignore this trend—a policy that prevailed from the withdrawal from
Vietnam until September 11, 2001. Meanwhile,
true conservatives began to assume control of key states and interstate
institutions. The neoliberal offensive of the 1980s was marked by the
Thatcher and Reagan regimes and the emergence of the International
Monetary Fund (IMF) as a key actor on the world scene. Where once (for
more than a century) conservative forces had attempted to portray
themselves as wiser liberals, now centrist liberals were compelled to
argue that they were more effective conservatives. The conservative
programs were clear. Domestically, conservatives tried to enact policies
that would reduce the cost of labor, minimize environmental constraints on
producers, and cut back on state welfare benefits. Actual successes were
modest, so conservatives then moved vigorously into the international
arena. The gatherings of the World Economic Forum in Davos provided a
meeting ground for elites and the media. The IMF provided a club for
finance ministers and central bankers. And the United States pushed for
the creation of the World Trade Organization to enforce free commercial
flows across the world’s frontiers. While
the United States wasn’t watching, the Soviet Union was collapsing. Yes,
Ronald Reagan had dubbed the Soviet Union an “evil empire” and had
used the rhetorical bombast of calling for the destruction of the Berlin
Wall, but the United States didn’t really mean it and certainly was not
responsible for the Soviet Union’s downfall. In truth, the Soviet Union
and its East European imperial zone collapsed because of popular
disillusionment with the Old Left in combination with Soviet leader
Mikhail Gorbachev’s efforts to save his regime by liquidating Yalta and
instituting internal liberalization (perestroika plus glasnost). Gorbachev
succeeded in liquidating Yalta but not in saving the Soviet Union
(although he almost did, be it said). The
United States was stunned and puzzled by the sudden collapse, uncertain
how to handle the consequences. The collapse of communism in effect
signified the collapse of liberalism, removing the only ideological
justification behind U.S. hegemony, a justification tacitly supported by
liberalism’s ostensible ideological opponent. This loss of legitimacy
led directly to the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait, which Iraqi leader Saddam
Hussein would never have dared had the Yalta arrangements remained in
place. In retrospect, U.S. efforts in the Gulf War accomplished a truce at
basically the same line of departure. But can a hegemonic power be
satisfied with a tie in a war with a middling regional power? Saddam
demonstrated that one could pick a fight with the United States and get
away with it. Even more than the defeat in Vietnam, Saddam’s brash
challenge has eaten at the innards of the U.S. right, in particular those
known as the hawks, which explains the fervor of their current desire to
invade Iraq and destroy its regime. Between
the Gulf War and September 11, 2001, the two major arenas of world
conflict were the Balkans and the Middle East. The United States has
played a major diplomatic role in both regions. Looking back, how
different would the results have been had the United States assumed a
completely isolationist position? In the Balkans, an economically
successful multinational state (Yugoslavia) broke down, essentially into
its component parts. Over 10 years, most of the resulting states have
engaged in a process of ethnification, experiencing fairly brutal
violence, widespread human rights violations, and outright wars. Outside
intervention—in which the United States figured most
prominently—brought about a truce and ended the most egregious violence,
but this intervention in no way reversed the ethnification, which is now
consolidated and somewhat legitimated. Would these conflicts have ended
differently without U.S. involvement? The violence might have continued
longer, but the basic results would probably not have been too different.
The picture is even grimmer in the Middle East, where, if anything, U.S.
engagement has been deeper and its failures more spectacular. In the
Balkans and the Middle East alike, the United States has failed to exert
its hegemonic clout effectively, not for want of will or effort but for
want of real power. The
Hawks Undone Then
came September 11—the shock and the reaction. Under fire from U.S.
legislators, the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) now claims it had
warned the Bush administration of possible threats. But despite the
CIA’s focus on al Qaeda and the agency’s intelligence expertise, it
could not foresee (and therefore, prevent) the execution of the terrorist
strikes. Or so would argue CIA Director George Tenet. This testimony can
hardly comfort the U.S. government or the American people. Whatever else
historians may decide, the attacks of September 11, 2001, posed a major
challenge to U.S. power. The persons responsible did not represent a major
military power. They were members of a nonstate force, with a high degree
of determination, some money, a band of dedicated followers, and a strong
base in one weak state. In short, militarily, they were nothing. Yet they
succeeded in a bold attack on U.S. soil. George
W. Bush came to power very critical of the Clinton administration’s
handling of world affairs. Bush and his advisors did not admit—but were
undoubtedly aware—that Clinton’s path had been the path of every U.S.
president since Gerald Ford, including that of Ronald Reagan and George
H.W. Bush. It had even been the path of the current Bush administration
before September 11. One only needs to look at how Bush handled the
downing of the U.S. plane off China in April 2001 to see that prudence had
been the name of the game. Following
the terrorist attacks, Bush changed course, declaring war on terrorism,
assuring the American people that “the outcome is certain” and
informing the world that “you are either with us or against us.” Long
frustrated by even the most conservative U.S. administrations, the hawks
finally came to dominate American policy. Their position is clear: The
United States wields overwhelming military power, and even though
countless foreign leaders consider it unwise for Washington to flex its
military muscles, these same leaders cannot and will not do anything if
the United States simply imposes its will on the rest. The hawks believe
the United States should act as an imperial power for two reasons: First,
the United States can get away with it. And second, if Washington
doesn’t exert its force, the United States will become increasingly
marginalized. Today,
this hawkish position has three expressions: the military assault in
Afghanistan, the de facto support for the Israeli attempt to liquidate the
Palestinian Authority, and the invasion of Iraq, which is reportedly in
the military preparation stage. Less than one year after the September
2001 terrorist attacks, it is perhaps too early to assess what such
strategies will accomplish. Thus far, these schemes have led to the
overthrow of the Taliban in Afghanistan (without the complete dismantling
of al Qaeda or the capture of its top leadership); enormous destruction in
Palestine (without rendering Palestinian leader Yasir Arafat
“irrelevant,” as Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon said he is); and
heavy opposition from U.S. allies in Europe and the Middle East to plans
for an invasion of Iraq. The
hawks’ reading of recent events emphasizes that opposition to U.S.
actions, while serious, has remained largely verbal. Neither Western
Europe nor Russia nor China nor Saudi Arabia has seemed ready to break
ties in serious ways with the United States. In other words, hawks
believe, Washington has indeed gotten away with it. The hawks assume a
similar outcome will occur when the U.S. military actually invades Iraq
and after that, when the United States exercises its authority elsewhere
in the world, be it in Iran, North Korea, Colombia, or perhaps Indonesia.
Ironically, the hawk reading has largely become the reading of the
international left, which has been screaming about U.S. policies—mainly
because they fear that the chances of U.S. success are high. But
hawk interpretations are wrong and will only contribute to the United
States’ decline, transforming a gradual descent into a much more rapid
and turbulent fall. Specifically, hawk approaches will fail for military,
economic, and ideological reasons. Undoubtedly,
the military remains the United States’ strongest card; in fact, it is
the only card. Today, the United States wields the most formidable
military apparatus in the world. And if claims of new, unmatched military
technologies are to be believed, the U.S. military edge over the rest of
the world is considerably greater today than it was just a decade ago. But
does that mean, then, that the United States can invade Iraq, conquer it
rapidly, and install a friendly and stable regime? Unlikely. Bear in mind
that of the three serious wars the U.S. military has fought since 1945
(Korea, Vietnam, and the Gulf War), one ended in defeat and two in
draws—not exactly a glorious record. Saddam
Hussein’s army is not that of the Taliban, and his internal military
control is far more coherent. A U.S. invasion would necessarily involve a
serious land force, one that would have to fight its way to Baghdad and
would likely suffer significant casualties. Such a force would also need
staging grounds, and Saudi Arabia has made clear that it will not serve in
this capacity. Would Kuwait or Turkey help out? Perhaps, if Washington
calls in all its chips. Meanwhile, Saddam can be expected to deploy all
weapons at his disposal, and it is precisely the U.S. government that
keeps fretting over how nasty those weapons might be. The United States
may twist the arms of regimes in the region, but popular sentiment clearly
views the whole affair as reflecting a deep anti-Arab bias in the United
States. Can such a conflict be won? The British General Staff has
apparently already informed Prime Minister Tony Blair that it does not
believe so. And
there is always the matter of “second fronts.” Following the Gulf War,
U.S. armed forces sought to prepare for the possibility of two
simultaneous regional wars. After a while, the Pentagon quietly abandoned
the idea as impractical and costly. But who can be sure that no potential
U.S. enemies would strike when the United States appears bogged down in
Iraq? Consider,
too, the question of U.S. popular tolerance of nonvictories. Americans
hover between a patriotic fervor that lends support to all wartime
presidents and a deep isolationist urge. Since 1945, patriotism has hit a
wall whenever the death toll has risen. Why should today’s reaction
differ? And even if the hawks (who are almost all civilians) feel
impervious to public opinion, U.S. Army generals, burnt by Vietnam, do
not. And
what about the economic front? In the 1980s, countless American analysts
became hysterical over the Japanese economic miracle. They calmed down in
the 1990s, given Japan’s well-publicized financial difficulties. Yet
after overstating how quickly Japan was moving forward, U.S. authorities
now seem to be complacent, confident that Japan lags far behind. These
days, Washington seems more inclined to lecture Japanese policymakers
about what they are doing wrong. Such
triumphalism hardly appears warranted. Consider the following April 20,
2002, New York Times report: “A Japanese laboratory has built the
world’s fastest computer, a machine so powerful that it matches the raw
processing power of the 20 fastest American computers combined and far
outstrips the previous leader, an I.B.M.-built machine. The achievement
... is evidence that a technology race that most American engineers
thought they were winning handily is far from over.” The analysis goes
on to note that there are “contrasting scientific and technological
priorities” in the two countries. The Japanese machine is built to
analyze climatic change, but U.S. machines are designed to simulate
weapons. This contrast embodies the oldest story in the history of
hegemonic powers. The dominant power concentrates (to its detriment) on
the military; the candidate for successor concentrates on the economy. The
latter has always paid off, handsomely. It did for the United States. Why
should it not pay off for Japan as well, perhaps in alliance with China? Finally,
there is the ideological sphere. Right now, the U.S. economy seems
relatively weak, even more so considering the exorbitant military expenses
associated with hawk strategies. Moreover, Washington remains politically
isolated; virtually no one (save Israel) thinks the hawk position makes
sense or is worth encouraging. Other nations are afraid or unwilling to
stand up to Washington directly, but even their foot-dragging is hurting
the United States. Yet
the U.S. response amounts to little more than arrogant arm-twisting.
Arrogance has its own negatives. Calling in chips means leaving fewer
chips for next time, and surly acquiescence breeds increasing resentment.
Over the last 200 years, the United States acquired a considerable amount
of ideological credit. But these days, the United States is running
through this credit even faster than it ran through its gold surplus in
the 1960s. The
United States faces two possibilities during the next 10 years: It can
follow the hawks’ path, with negative consequences for all but
especially for itself. Or it can realize that the negatives are too great.
Simon Tisdall of the Guardian recently argued that even
disregarding international public opinion, “the U.S. is not able to
fight a successful Iraqi war by itself without incurring immense damage,
not least in terms of its economic interests and its energy supply. Mr.
Bush is reduced to talking tough and looking ineffectual.” And if the
United States still invades Iraq and is then forced to withdraw, it will
look even more ineffectual. President
Bush’s options appear extremely limited, and there is little doubt that
the United States will continue to decline as a decisive force in world
affairs over the next decade. The real question is not whether U.S.
hegemony is waning but whether the United States can devise a way to
descend gracefully, with minimum damage to the world, and to itself. Immanuel
Wallerstein is a senior research scholar at Yale University and author of,
most recently, The End of the World As We Know It: Social Science for the
Twenty-First Century (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1999). WANT
TO KNOW MORE? This
article draws from the research reported in Terence K. Hopkins and
Immanuel Wallerstein’s, eds., The Age of Transition: Trajectory of
the World-System, 1945–2025 (London: Zed Books,
1996). In his new book, The Paradox of American Power: Why the
World’s Only Superpower Can’t Go It Alone (New York: Oxford
University Press, 2002), Joseph S. Nye Jr. argues that the United States
can remain on top, provided it emphasizes multilateralism. For a less
optimistic view, see Thomas J. McCormick’s America’s Half-Century:
United States Foreign Policy in the Cold War and After, 2nd ed.
(Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1995). David Calleo’s latest
book, Rethinking Europe’s Future (Princeton: Princeton
University Press, 2001), cogently analyzes the ins and outs of the
European Union and its potential impact on U.S. power in the world. In
1993, the Norwegian Nobel Committee convened a meeting of leading
international analysts to discuss the role and influence of superpowers
throughout history. Their analyses can be found in Geir Lundestad’s,
ed., The Fall of Great Powers: Stability, Peace and Legitimacy
(Oslo: Scandinavian University Press, 1994), which includes essays by
William H. McNeill, Istvan Deak, Alec Nove, Wolfgang J. Mommsen, Robert
Gilpin, Wang Gungwu, John Lewis Gaddis, and Paul Kennedy, among others.
Eric Hobsbawm offers a splendid geopolitical analysis of the 20th century
in The Age of Extremes: A History of the World, 1914–1991
(New York: Pantheon, 1994). Giovanni Arrighi, Beverly J. Silver, and their
collaborators take a longer view of hegemonic transitions over the
centuries—from Dutch to British, from British to American, from American
to some uncertain future hegemon—in Chaos and Governance in the
Modern World System (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press,
1999). Finally, it is always useful to return to André Fontaine’s
classic History of the Cold War (New York: Pantheon, 1968). Foreign
Policy’s extensive coverage of American hegemony and the U.S. role in
the world includes, most recently, “In Praise of Cultural
Imperialism?” (Summer 1997) by David Rothkopf, “The Benevolent
Empire” (Summer 1998) by Robert Kagan, “The Perils of (and for)
an Imperial America” (Summer 1998) by Charles William Maynes, “Americans
and the World: A Survey at the Century’s End” (Spring 1999) by
John E. Rielly, “Vox Americani” (September/October 2001) by
Steven Kull, and “The Dependent Colossus” (March/April 2002) by
Joseph S. Nye Jr. »For
links to relevant Web sites, access to the FP Archive, and a
comprehensive index of related FOREIGN POLICY articles, go to www.foreignpolicy.com. |