The Folly of Empire: What George W. Bush Could Learn from Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow WilsonOxford University Press, 15. juni 2006 - 256 sider A century ago, the Theodore Roosevelt administration believed building an American empire was the only way the U.S. could ensure its role in the world, but came to see the occupation of the Philippines as America's "heel of Achilles." Woodrow Wilson, shocked by the failure of American intervention in Mexico and by the outbreak of World War I, came to see imperialism as the underlying cause of war and set about trying to create an international system to eliminate empires. But, the current Bush administration, despite the lessons of the past, has revived the older dreams of American empire--under the guise of democracy--even touting the American experience in the Philippines as a success upon which the United States could build in attempting to transform the Middle East. With The Folly of Empire, John B. Judis shows that history can teach us lessons and allow political leaders, if sensitive to history, to change their strategy in order to avoid past mistakes. Judis shows how presidents from Franklin Roosevelt to Bill Clinton drew upon what Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson learned about the pitfalls of using American power unilaterally to carve out a world in America's image. Exercising leadership through international institutions and alliances, the United States was able to win the Cold War and the first Gulf War. But by ignoring these lessons, the Bush administration has created a quagmire of terror and ethnic conflict. By examining America's role in the international community--then and now--The Folly of Empire is a sharp and compelling critique of America's current foreign policy and offers a direct challenge to neo-conservatives. |
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Side 4
... wrote in defense of the annexation of the Philippines: The East is to be opened and transformed, whether we will it or not; the standards of the West are to be imposed upon it; nations and peoples who have stood still the centuries ...
... wrote in defense of the annexation of the Philippines: The East is to be opened and transformed, whether we will it or not; the standards of the West are to be imposed upon it; nations and peoples who have stood still the centuries ...
Side 7
... support American overseas intervention when it met a strict test of national interest and didn't involve ceding control to international organizations or coalitions. Their policies, wrote Condoleezza Rice, who The Folly of Empire 7.
... support American overseas intervention when it met a strict test of national interest and didn't involve ceding control to international organizations or coalitions. Their policies, wrote Condoleezza Rice, who The Folly of Empire 7.
Side 11
... wrote in The American Commonwealth in 1888, “The only one principle to which people have learnt to cling in foreign policy is that the less they have of it the better.”1 In 1889, the New York Sun, the precursor of the current ...
... wrote in The American Commonwealth in 1888, “The only one principle to which people have learnt to cling in foreign policy is that the less they have of it the better.”1 In 1889, the New York Sun, the precursor of the current ...
Side 15
... wrote that God is “preparing in our Anglo-Saxon civilization the die with which to stamp the peoples of the earth.”13 Only after World War II did the term “Americans” come to have the full-throated multiethnic, multiracial connotation ...
... wrote that God is “preparing in our Anglo-Saxon civilization the die with which to stamp the peoples of the earth.”13 Only after World War II did the term “Americans” come to have the full-throated multiethnic, multiracial connotation ...
Side 19
... wrote: Religion stands tip-toe in our land Ready to pass to the American strand. The Pilgrims and Puritans who landed in North America believed that they were founding a “new Israel” that would serve as the site of the millennium ...
... wrote: Religion stands tip-toe in our land Ready to pass to the American strand. The Pilgrims and Puritans who landed in North America believed that they were founding a “new Israel” that would serve as the site of the millennium ...
Innhold
1 | |
11 | |
II Americas Imperial Moment | 29 |
III Theodore Roosevelt and the Heel of Achilles | 51 |
IV Woodrow Wilson and the Way to Liberty | 75 |
V Woodrow Wilson and the Conscience of the World | 95 |
VI Franklin Roosevelt and the Four Freedoms | 119 |
VII Cold War Liberalism from Truman to Reagan | 131 |
VIII Bush Clinton and the Triumph of Wilsonianism | 149 |
IX George W Bush Sees Evil | 165 |
X George W Bush and the Illusion of Omnipotence | 185 |
Conclusion | 201 |
Notes | 213 |
Acknowledgments | 231 |
Index | 233 |
Andre utgaver - Vis alle
The Folly of Empire: What George W. Bush Could Learn from Theodore Roosevelt ... John B. Judis Begrenset visning - 2006 |
The Folly of Empire: What George W. Bush Could Learn from Theodore Roosevelt ... John B. Judis Begrenset visning - 2006 |
The Folly of Empire: What George W. Bush Could Learn from Theodore Roosevelt ... John B. Judis Begrenset visning - 2010 |
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