
In Republic In Peril, David C. Hendrickson Advances A Powerful Critique Of American Policy Since The End Of The Cold War. America's Outsized Military Spending And Global Commitments, He Shows, Undermine Rather Than Uphold International Order. They Raise Rather Than Reduce The Danger Of War, Imperiling Both American Security And Domestic Liberty. An Alternative Path Lies In A New Internationalism In Tune With The United Nations Charter And The Philosophy Of Republican Liberty Embraced By America's Founders. The Sum Of The Conventional View-touted By The National Security Establishment And Embraced By Hillary Clinton And George W. Bush-is That It Is Impossible To Have A Liberal World Order Unless America Has Hostile Relations With Russia, China, And Iran, Together With A Shifting Cast Of Lesser States. Donald Trump, Iconoclastic Is So Many Ways, Promises To Bring The Militarization Of U.s. Foreign Policy To An Entirely New Level. But It Is Precisely Those Who Would Lead Us Into Battle With Hostile States Who Threaten A Liberal World Order, Because They Look To A Competition That Is To Be Settled Through Dominance Rather Than Reciprocity. Formed By Ideology, Greatly Fortified By Special Interests, The U.s. Posture Has Put It Into Standing Collision With Other Great Powers. The Flaws Of The U.s.-led World Order-a Chronic Overreliance On Force, Habitual Violations Of The Rules Governing Intervention-should Not Be Attributed To Liberalism But To A Flock Of Neo-isms Parading In Its Name. In Searching For A Remedy, We Must Find It By Rediscovering, Not Repudiating, The Liberal Tradition. Hendrickson Offers A Panoramic View Of America's Choices In Foreign Policy, Analyzing The Vested Interests And Ideologies That Have Justified A Sprawling Global Empire Over The Last 25 Years. Hendrickson Recovers The Tradition Of Liberal Pluralism, One That Sees In Nonintervention, The Balance Of Power, And Great Power Concert The Formula For A Durable Peace. Rather Than Claiming A Superior
This book investigates whether the post-Cold War trajectory of American foreign policy, characterized by military expansionism and global intervention, has compromised the nation's security and the stability of the international order. David C. Hendrickson, a scholar of international relations, utilizes historical analysis and political theory to argue that the current U.S. posture—driven by ideological rigidity and special interests—deviates from the principles of republican liberty and the United Nations Charter. He proposes a return to a tradition of liberal pluralism, emphasizing nonintervention and the balance of power as the primary mechanisms for achieving a durable global peace.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts and political analysts frequently note the intellectual rigor of Hendrickson's critique, identifying it as a significant contribution to the debate on American hegemony. Readers often highlight the book's dense, academic prose and its challenging stance against the established national security consensus.
Page Count:
336
Publication Date:
2017-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190660392
ISBN-13:
9780190660390
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