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Is America too powerful for its own good?
The Observer (U.K.) ^ | 02/10/2002 | Sunder Katwala

Posted on 02/09/2002 3:44:16 PM PST by Pokey78

Just how powerful is the United States? The Observer asked the leading foreign policy experts on both sides of the Atlantic to assess what the unparalleled power of Bush's America means for the world. You can have your say online here.

>"The United States is more powerful compared to other countries than any entity since Rome, and it is unlikely to be overtaken by other nations in the first half of this century. But this fact diverts attention from the effects of the information revolution and globalization which are making non-state actors (witness Al-Qaeda) more important and weak distant places (witness Afghanistan) more difficult to ignore. That is why I have titled by new book The Paradox of American Power: Why the World's Only Superpower Can't Go It Alone. Being Number One is not going to be what it used to be. American preponderance is a long way from omnipotence, and it will be important for Americans to realize that they must cooperate with others to get the outcomes they want".
- Joseph Nye, Dean of the Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University.

"The United States still has the fastest gun in the West, but the days of the Lone Ranger are over. Though it is the reigning global hyperpower, tempted after 9/11 more than ever to impose itself - Pax Americana style - on a reluctant world by military and economic means, this is no longer possible. For terrorism is itself a perverse expression of interdependence and the new limits on sovereignty, a tribute to the same extra-national networking forces that drive market globalization. Unless the U.S. begins to operate multilaterally in partnership with others; unless it develops civic, political and democratic strategies to complement its military tactics; and unless it finds ways to globalize democracy and public goods as successfully as it has globalized markets and private profits, it is likely to discover that its strengths will be leveraged by the weak against its interests (as happened on 9/11). In a world of interdependence, the new realism insists that terrorism is less likely to be defeated by plutocracy than by democracy, while the most powerful and prosperous nations will flourish only if the weakest and poorest are allowed to flourish along side of them".
-Benjamin R. Barber, author of Jihad vs. McWorld, is Kekst Professor of Civil Society at the University of Maryland and currently the Daimler-Benz Fellow at the American Academy of Berlin.

"The USA is already unchallengeable in terms of military power. A further increase in its defence budget hardly seems necessary, when there's room to redistribute resources from old-fashioned heavy divisions into special forces and new technology. There's a danger that such overwhelming emphasis on military power will lead US policymakers to forget that persuasion is more effective than coercion. The US can go to war on its own; but to maintain a peaceful world order it needs friends and allies. The current unilateralist mood in Washington is a tragic retreat from the enlightened self-interest which led previous US Administrations to build multilateral institutions to underpin an open international order".
- William Wallace, Professor of International Studies, London School of Economics and Liberal Democrat peer.

"If by power, is meant military might - the two are very separate concepts - then what follows from the fact of US military predominance depends entirely on how it will be deployed. There are great opportunities here, and great dangers. The deployment of military might, if done so with wisdom and on the basis of a long term political (non-military) view of the world, can greatly enhance the power, image and implications of the whole Western democratic system for those parts of the world that do not at the moment benefit from what that system has to offer. This is clearly what has to be done.

On the other hand, the use of military power merely to penalize and destroy without putting anything back in its place, will ultimately weaken US power in the world and lead to its retreat in the decades to come. The US will in these circumstances go the way all great empires have before it in history."
- Kanan Makiya, Iraqi expatriate and writer, is author of Republic of Fear: The politics of modern Iraq.

"America's power is unrivalled. It has no military, economic, or political competitors. As the biggest billiard ball on the table, it can force all others to move in its direction. In world politics, power rules and absolute power rules absolutely. This is the Bush world view, and it has a lot going for it. America can achieve much of what it wants because of its sheer dominance in world affairs. Power is unimportant only to those who do not have it.

But there are costs in using power arrogantly. It breeds resentment. It gives others reasons to coalesce in a balance against America. And it provides the weak incentives to expose America's vulnerabilities, which, for all its power, are still aplenty. Power is best used wisely, in ways that does the greatest good for the most. That is what America did in the 1940s, and what it must do now when its power is essentially unchallenged".
- Ivo Daalder, Senior Fellow, The Brookings Institution

"If one country must be so dominant militarily, then it is probably better that it is the United States rather than another country. However, history suggests that such dominance leads to abuse and it is encumbent on the rest of the world to find ways of restraining the United States through international law, countervailing power and dialogue.

The European Union, which has achieved parity with the United States in trade and investment, has a major responsibility in this endeavour. Plans for a European Security and Defence Policy (ESDP) therefore need to be accelerated and EU governments need to commit adequate resource to it".
-Victor Bulmer-Thomas, Director of the Royal Institute of International Affairs

"The implications of a unipolar world are bad for everyone concerned. If America stands aloof from global problems, it is accused of isolationism. If it intervenes, it is accused of imperialism. Either way, it becomes a target of resentment and violence. For the rest it means frustration and impotence.

Complaining won't do any good. The rest of us have to raise our game and provide America with partners they can't ignore. For Britain, that means building a more united Europe with a more coherent foreign policy and a strong single currency. It's either that or another American century."
- David Clark, former special adviser to Robin Cook at the Foreign Office.

"The USA is militarily dominant in a way that no other power can challenge. The USA is the world's largest economy, but the EU 15 runs it close. Military dominance needs legitimacy in today's world. The USA needs allies and also the fig leaf of the UN. The USA is no longer quite as powerful economically as it was in 1945, the rest of the industrial world has become richer. The US is now a major capital importer and the dollar depends on the international financial markets. So America is only half boss".
-Paul Hirst, Professor of Social Theory at Birkbeck College, University of London and co-author of Globalisation in Question.

If for the US the 1970s was a decade of decline, the 1990s turned out to be the years of renewal. It began with the fall of the USSR, continued with Japan's economic implosion and Europe's dithering in the Balkans, and was finally confirmed by Washington's response to September 11th and the Bush militarily build-up.

What are the implications for us? That Europe either puts up - and accepts the American challenge - or shuts up and continues to play the role of complaining, yet compliant, junior partner to the hegemon across the Atlantic.
-Professor Michael Cox, Associate Research Fellow, Royal Institute of International Affairs

The rise in US military spending ought to be compared to the decision in the First World War to order up more cavalry when the first wave had been mown down by machine guns. The US has no competitor in high tech military equipment but this is mostly irrelevant against the knives used to carry out the September 11th attacks. The bombing of Afghanistan has created the illusion of victory, there may yet be a long drawn out guerilla war in central asia with the next opium crop the focus. Joint Strike Fighters and new artillery guns are at best irrelevant and are political and financial diversion from the necessary multilateral give and take needed to really isolate the terrorists.
-Dan Plesch, Royal United Services Institute.


TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs
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1 posted on 02/09/2002 3:44:16 PM PST by Pokey78
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To: Pokey78
Is America too powerful?
Yes. And I'm too rich and my wife is too good looking.
2 posted on 02/09/2002 3:50:58 PM PST by HangThemHigh
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To: Pokey78
The United States of America is a blessing to the world.
3 posted on 02/09/2002 3:55:19 PM PST by abclily
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To: Pokey78
 the reigning global hyperpower

This irritates me.  The French came up
with this hyperpower nonsense a few months
ago.  There is no need for such a term, as
the power level known as super continues
to exist, and is occupied by the US.  A
global hyperpower would not put up with
Cuba, North Korea, nor Communist China.
Jingoistic rhetoric aside, there is no hyperpower.

4 posted on 02/09/2002 3:55:29 PM PST by gcruse
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To: HangThemHigh
Yes. And I'm too rich and my wife is too good looking.

Sigh, some guys have all the luck!!! ;-D

5 posted on 02/09/2002 3:55:39 PM PST by KJMorgan
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To: HangThemHigh
"Yes. And I'm too rich and my wife is too good looking."

But can she cook?

6 posted on 02/09/2002 4:00:13 PM PST by DugwayDuke
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To: Pokey78
Hey Sunder Katwala,

Are you scared little boy? Did the mean old USA ROCK YOUR WORLD??

Good,
think of it as a learning experience.

7 posted on 02/09/2002 4:06:38 PM PST by JoeSixPack1
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To: gcruse
I sort of like the term hyper-power. It's Super!

It is really difficult to be the strongest and the richest. You have to deal with all the whining and envy from everyone else. They hate you when you flex your muscles, and they hate you when you don't. Whats a Supersonic-hyperballistic-power like us to do?

8 posted on 02/09/2002 4:09:46 PM PST by NeonKnight
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To: gcruse
Jingoistic rhetoric aside, there is no hyperpower.

That He has not generally gotten involved in petty earthly squabbles does not mean that He does not exist.

9 posted on 02/09/2002 4:10:30 PM PST by supercat
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Comment #10 Removed by Moderator

To: Pokey78
Is America too powerful for its own good? The Observer (U.K.) | 02/10/2002 | Sunder Katwala

Wa-a-a-a-ait a minute......is "Sunder Katwala" British for "Madeliene Albright"?

11 posted on 02/09/2002 4:16:06 PM PST by Texas Eagle
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To: Pokey78
the hegemon across the Atlantic

Listen here, Cox--if this "hegemon" wasn't busting @$$ across the globe, you'd have some REAL hegemony coming at you...

12 posted on 02/09/2002 4:16:53 PM PST by Pistias
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To: bologna.com
....no,

& the reason= how we started & what we're based on & held in check by

our Constitution

"check please,"

The concept is bassak'words,

every other land is in our dust!

13 posted on 02/09/2002 4:23:59 PM PST by norraad
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Comment #14 Removed by Moderator

To: Pokey78
Barely one of these people address Al Qaeda and Imperial Islamist Fundamentalism. This shows how utterly incompetent the Lefties of this bunch are. They can't open their eyes.

I note that some Brits will use this to lobby for speeding up "Europeanization". Big mistake. Hey, why shouldn't mother England "join" us somehow?

Anyway, it's true we can't go absolutely alone. Therefore I suggest a full embrace of Russia, kicked off with massive joint naval exercises off the west coast of France. Now THAT will realize their complaints.

15 posted on 02/09/2002 4:25:51 PM PST by Shermy
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To: supercat

That He has not generally gotten involved in petty
earthly squabbles does not mean that He does not exist.

Universal noninvolvement is indistinguishable from nonexistence.

16 posted on 02/09/2002 4:30:52 PM PST by gcruse
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To: Pokey78
Let's see now. We go to war with a country that is harboring and training thousands of guys just like the ones who flew into the WTC, then, we build the country up, help it to form a democratic government, give it billions in order to rebuild what was broke long before we got there, and these people are complaining?

We asked for the help of the euroweenies, they said no and now they're all in a twist because we're acting on our own.

These people are really, really confused.

17 posted on 02/09/2002 4:31:41 PM PST by McGavin999
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To: gcruse
Uh Oh...prepare for flames.
18 posted on 02/09/2002 4:33:49 PM PST by NeonKnight
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To: McGavin999
We asked for the help of the euroweenies, they said no and now they're all in a twist because we're acting on our own. These people are really, really confused.

They are really not useful in battlefield situations. They just get in the way. They should just shut their traps and let the adults get some work done.

19 posted on 02/09/2002 4:39:04 PM PST by NeonKnight
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To: Shermy
Hey, why shouldn't mother England "join" us somehow?

Anyway, it's true we can't go absolutely alone. Therefore I suggest a full embrace of Russia, kicked off with massive joint naval exercises off the west coast of France. Now THAT will realize their complaints.

Interesting notion. I remember reading an article several months ago where the author postulated that, since we already have NAFTA, why not bring in other nations in on the agreement. WE could bring in countries like Britain, Australia, New Zealand and Japan (Taiwan?...heehee!). Later on Russia, it was suggested, would be a good idea. We might even be able to 'snag' a couple countries from the EU. Greece and Italy come to mind.

20 posted on 02/09/2002 5:03:37 PM PST by uglybiker
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