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A decade of exhausting wars, punishing economic setbacks,
fast-rising rivals and unrealized global aspirations has called
America's global role into question as never before. Will the US
long continue to be the only superpower in the international
system? Should it sustain the world-shaping grand strategy it's
followed since the dawn of the Cold War? Everyone who thinks about
international relations cares about these questions. But while
opinions are common, answers grounded in scholarship are hard to
find because of lack of data and theory relevant to the 21st as
opposed to the 20th century. In America Abroad, Stephen Brooks and
William Wohlforth, two of the nation's leading international
relations scholars, fill this gap with a bracing assessment of
contemporary America's shifting global role. Their findings will
reorient the debate on America's future position and grand
strategy. Using new data and new approaches to measurement tailored
to 21st century global politics, they show that United States'
position as a peerless superpower will be secure long into the
future. Engaging a vast body of the newest scholarship, they
develop the theory needed to answer the most pressing grand
strategic question of the day: How would America's interests fare
if the United States decided to disengage from the world? Their
answer runs counter to a rising chorus of calls from many academics
and policy makers for US the "come home": retrenchment would put
core US security and economic interests would be put at risk.
America Abroad is not, however, an unalloyed endorsement for the
foreign policy status quo. By providing a new way to think about
the United States' position in the world, Brooks and Wohlforth move
beyond the unrealistic dichotomies that characterize much of the
contemporary debate. Although rise of China will not soon end
America's career as the sole superpower, it is a significant shift
that alters the strategic landscape and demands adjustments. And
they develop a distinct position in the evolving debate on US
foreign policy, now torn between calls for a more expansive style
of global leadership that seeks to remake the world in America's
image and demands for it to retrench and leave the world's troubles
behind. Their findings support America remaining globally engaged
but focusing on three objectives that have been at the core of US
foreign policy since the Cold War's dawn: reducing great power
rivalry and security competition in Europe, East Asia, and the
Middle East, fostering economic globalization, and sustaining
institutionalized cooperation that advances America's interests.
Combining scholarly rigor and accessible prose, America Abroad will
force us to rethink our assumptions about the nature and utility of
US power in the global arena.
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