With the cold war over and the Soviet empire dead, a new
examination of American national policies and priorities is
beginning. Most of the economic, political and military costs of
the American empire, which exceed $1 trillion each year, are being
questioned for the first time since World War II. Touted by George
Washington as the infant empire, the United States expanded across
the North American continent and at the turn of the twentiety
century into the Pacific and Caribbean. At the end of World War II,
it became the leader of the free world, a world empire of
unprecedented power. However, by the 1980s, the strain of world
leadership became apparent and signs of economic decline appeared,
which is the inevitable fate of all empires. Jim Hanson undertakes
this examination of imperial overstretch and decline and calls for
a rechanneling of national energies into solving world-wide
problems of war, environmental deterioration, and over-population.
This historic-based and analytic critique of imperial America will
interest scholars and students of American and world history,
political and social science, economics, and foreign affairs.
General
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