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Mission Failure - America and the World in the Post-Cold War Era (Hardcover)
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Mission Failure - America and the World in the Post-Cold War Era (Hardcover)
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Unbeknownst to just about all observers of international affairs,
America's decision in 1991 to provide air defense to oppressed
Kurds in Iraq after the Gulf War had ended ushered in an entirely
new era in American foreign policy. Until that moment, the United
States used military power to defend against threats (real and
perceived) that its leaders thought would either weaken America's
position in the world order or-in the worst case-threaten the
homeland. For the first time ever, the United States militarily was
now actively involved in states that represented no threat, and
with missions that were largely humanitarian and socio-political.
After establishing the Kurdish no-fly zone, the US in quick
succession intervened in Somalia, Haiti, and Kosovo. Even after
9/11, it decided that it had a duty to not just invade Iraq, but
reconstruct Iraqi society along Western lines. In Mission Failure,
the eminent international relations scholar Michael Mandelbaum
provides a sweeping interpretive history of American foreign policy
in the post-Cold War era to show why this new approach was doomed
to failure. America had always adhered to a mission-based foreign
policy, but in the post-Cold War era it swung away from security
concerns to a near-exclusive emphasis on implanting Western
institutions wherever it could. Many good things happened in this
era, including a broad expansion of democracy and strong growth in
the global economy. But the U.S. never had either the capacity or
the will to change societies that were dramatically different from
our own. Over two decades later, we can see the wreckage: a broken
Iraq a teetering Afghanistan, a China that laughs at our demands
that they adopt a human rights regime, and a still-impoverished
Haiti. Mandelbaum does not deny that American foreign policy has
always had a strong ideological component. Instead, he argues that
emphasizing that particular feature generally leads to mission
failure. We are able to defend ourselves well and effectively
project power, but we have very little capacity to change other
societies. If nothing else, that is what the last quarter century
has taught us.
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