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American power and liberal order : a conservative internationalist grand strategy / Paul D. Miller.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Washington, D.C. : Georgetown University Press, (c)2016.Description: 1 online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781626163430
Subject(s): Genre/Form: LOC classification:
  • JZ1480 .A447 2016
Online resources: Available additional physical forms:
Contents:
In search of a 21st century grand strategy -- Power and liberty : a history -- The new world disorder -- Strategic courses of action -- The balance of power and the democratic peace -- Barbarians, failed states, and stability operations -- Regional application -- The frontline : Europe and East Asia -- The opportunity : South Asia -- The quagmire : the Middle East -- The periphery : Latin America and Africa -- The national security toolkit -- Homeland defense -- Diplomacy and development -- Military, intelligence, and national security decision-making -- Conclusion.
Subject: Contrary to widespread belief, the United States has been following a broadly consistent grand strategy across presidential administrations for more than a century by using American power to create and expand the liberal international system. This liberal order is the outer perimeter of American security. Today, after the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, some are calling for a policy of restraint or pulling back because they believe America is relatively safe and its resources are overstretched. Paul D. Miller argues that they are wrong. American security and the liberal international order need US leadership and are in jeopardy from nuclear-armed autocracies, violent non-state actors, and the failed states who harbor them. In response, the United States should not pull back but should continue to promote five pillars of American grand strategy: maintaining a favorable balance of power among the great powers, defending the U.S. homeland from attack, promoting democracy, investing in good governance abroad, and punishing rogue actors that threaten allies or the stability of the international system. Miller does however call for reprioitzing where around the globe the United States should focus its energies in the future, and he proposes common sense reforms to the US national security state so as to better manage foreign policy.
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Item type Current library Collection Call number URL Status Date due Barcode
Online Book (LOGIN USING YOUR MY CIU LOGIN AND PASSWORD) Online Book (LOGIN USING YOUR MY CIU LOGIN AND PASSWORD) G. Allen Fleece Library ONLINE Non-fiction JZ1480 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Link to resource Available ocn950611489

Includes bibliographies and index.

A framework for thinking about U.S. grand strategy -- In search of a 21st century grand strategy -- Power and liberty : a history -- The new world disorder -- Strategic courses of action -- The balance of power and the democratic peace -- Barbarians, failed states, and stability operations -- Regional application -- The frontline : Europe and East Asia -- The opportunity : South Asia -- The quagmire : the Middle East -- The periphery : Latin America and Africa -- The national security toolkit -- Homeland defense -- Diplomacy and development -- Military, intelligence, and national security decision-making -- Conclusion.

Contrary to widespread belief, the United States has been following a broadly consistent grand strategy across presidential administrations for more than a century by using American power to create and expand the liberal international system. This liberal order is the outer perimeter of American security. Today, after the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, some are calling for a policy of restraint or pulling back because they believe America is relatively safe and its resources are overstretched. Paul D. Miller argues that they are wrong. American security and the liberal international order need US leadership and are in jeopardy from nuclear-armed autocracies, violent non-state actors, and the failed states who harbor them. In response, the United States should not pull back but should continue to promote five pillars of American grand strategy: maintaining a favorable balance of power among the great powers, defending the U.S. homeland from attack, promoting democracy, investing in good governance abroad, and punishing rogue actors that threaten allies or the stability of the international system. Miller does however call for reprioitzing where around the globe the United States should focus its energies in the future, and he proposes common sense reforms to the US national security state so as to better manage foreign policy.

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