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At war with ourselves: why America is squandering its chance to build a better world

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As correspondent for Newsweek, Michael Hirsh has traveled to every continent, reporting on American foreign policy.

Now he draws on his experience to offer an original explanation of America's role in the world and the problems facing the nation today and in the future. Using colorful vignettes and up-close reporting from his coverage of the first two post-Cold War presidents, Bill Clinton and George W.

Bush, Hirsh argues that America has a new role never before played by any nation: it is the world's Uberpower, overseeing the global system from the air, land, sea and, increasingly, from space as well. And that means America has a unique opportunity do what no great power in history has ever done - to perpetuate indefinitely the global system it hasbuilt, to create an international community with American power at its centre that is so secure it may never be challenged.

Yet Americans are squandering this chance by failing to realize what is at stake.

At the same time that America as a nation possesses powers it barely comprehends, Americans asindividuals have vulnerabilities they never before imagined.

They desperately need the international community on their side. In an era when democracy and free markets have become the prevailing ideology, Hirsh argues, one of America's biggest problems will be "ideological blowback" - facing up to the flaws and contradictions of its own ideals.

Hence, for example, the biggest threat to political stability is not totalitarianism, but the tricky task of instituting democracy in the Arab world without giving Islamic fundamentalists the reigns of power.

The only way for Washington to avoid accusations of hypocrisyis to allow the global institutions it has built, like the U.N., to do the hard work of promoting U.S. values.

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£36.20
Product Details
Oxford University Press
0198034822 / 9780198034827
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
327.73
02/09/2004
English
288 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%