The Second World War put an end to America's historical
isolation from international power politics, and so also to the
long-standing American defiance of the Realist ideology that shaped
Old World affairs. The advent of transoceanic military
technologies, now wielded by menacing states such as Nazi Germany
and the Soviet Union, made Americans more receptive to the Realist
idea that international relations is about fear and survival. The
American Realists Reinhold Niebuhr, Hans Morgenthau, and Kenneth
Waltz developed a modern strategic framework that sought to
introduce American leaders and the educated public to these harsher
realities of international politics. They emphasized a clear-eyed,
cold approach to the play of interests, egotism, and the drive for
power in world affairs -- a struggle in which the threat of major
war remained, in the end, the only legitimate currency.
Yet even as Americans began to accept this new Realism,
thermonuclear weaponry threatened to make it absurd. A major war to
defend the nation might result in its total destruction; a
thermonuclear war leading to the death of hundreds of millions of
citizens seemed an unusual way to preserve American survival. This
dilemma became central to the Realist understanding of Niebuhr,
Morgenthau, and Waltz. How could a Realist approach to
international politics and war be sustained in the face of possible
global annihilation?
"Glimmer of a New Leviathan" is the engrossing story of how the
three chief architects of an influential ideology struggled with
the implications of their own creation. It offers crucial
historical context for contemporary debates about weapons of mass
destruction and the post-Cold War international order.
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