EXISTE muito WISHFULL THINKING desse SOCIALISTA que odeia a AMERICA. Ele esta errado e nem conta com o PODER DA RUSSIA!!!! E so o LIBERAL N.Y.T. PODIA PUBLICAR UMA treta dessas!!!
January 30, 2008
Responses to Parag Khanna's 'Times' Mag Essay
Parag Khanna’s New York Times Magazine essay, adapted from the New America Foundation scholar’s forthcoming book The Second World: Empires and Influence in the New Global Order (Random House) gets mixed reviews among academic bloggers.
The article is long and complex, but it argues that America’s “unipolar moment” is over. “Now,” writes Khanna, “rather than bestriding the globe, we are competing—and losing—in a geopolitical marketplace alongside the world’s other superpowers: the European Union and China. This is geopolitics in the 21st century: the new Big Three. Not Russia, an increasingly depopulated expanse run by Gazprom.gov; not an incoherent Islam embroiled in internal wars; and not India, lagging decades behind China in both development and strategic appetite. The Big Three make the rules—their own rules—without any one of them dominating. And the others are left to choose their suitors in this post-American world.”
Among Khanna’s conclusions is that U.S. presidents must gear their rhetoric toward global, not American, interests; and that the State Department needs to organize regional commands, much as the Pentagon does, and to develop a “diplomatic-industrial complex” that would include Wall Street and foundations in federal foreign-aid initiatives.
Daniel Nexon, at The Duck of Minerva, writes that Khanna’s argument is “excellent . . . one of the most important contributions to the debate over American grand strategy to make its way into the public sphere in quite some time.”
“Khanna,” says Nexon, “thinks the U.S. needs to adapt soon to his new great game, in which the ‘second world’s’ orientation will determine the global balance of power, and, among other things, abandon the us-versus-them attitude which undermines its influence and makes great-power concert-style management difficult.
“Khanna’s put his finger on many key contemporary trends.”
But Nexon has some criticisms, too, among them that Khanna underplays Russia’s economic and political potential and overplays the notion of unipolarity’s demise.
“This is less his fault than that of the ‘unipolar moment’ crowd, writes Nexon, “many of whom overstated—and continue to overstate—the implications, as well as the degree, of American primacy.
“American primacy never implied that the U.S. could ‘make its own reality’ or largely ignore resistance to its policies and position. U.S. power depended, and continues to depend, as much on the micro-politics of its foreign relations as upon its raw military and economic might.”
“While . . . the U.S. faces serious counter-hegemonic challenges,” Nexon says, “we should be careful about equating diminished U.S. primacy with some form of tripolarity.”
Daniel W. Drezner “heap[s] praise on Khanna’s agent for getting the excerpt placed into the magazine. There’s less demand than there used to be for prose stylings that read like Benjamin Barber after a three-day coke bender in Macao.”
But Drezner is less impressed with Khanna’s argument. “Maybe I’m a stickler for conceptual boundaries,” he writes, “but I don’t think you can claim that the central conceit in your book—the second world—is really, really important by temporarily sticking China in the category to inflate the numbers.”
Alex Kafka | Posted on Wednesday January 30, 2008 | Permalink
Comments
I can’t believe Khanna’s being given kudos for a geopolitical analysis presented nearly a decade ago by Sam Huntington, for which the neo-cons constructed their so-called antidote. Actually both sides missed the point entirely, but we’ll leave that for another day…..
— marci Jan 30, 04:34 PM #
This is all group psychology—Americans struggling with monkey hormones about whether they are still top monkeys or not. Males have to get rank settled before moving onto necessary tasks and missions so articles like this are a necessary prelude, in males, to seeing needs in realities. First get one’s ego’s place fixed, then notice what is needed. Testesterone is still largely what gets published here and there, academia notwithstanding.
— Richard Tabor Greene Jan 30, 07:26 PM #
I agree with you Marci… Khanna is a Tom Friedman or Huntington wanna-be, and mentions on his website the catch-phrases and buzzwords he has coined such as “second-world”... Geopolitical realists know that no bloc of nations can effectively align successfully against US interests— not the non-aligned movement, not anyone… The US can simply split any coalition against it through carrots and sticks, or by dividing and conquering the multitude of ethnicities that make up the nation-states of the second world. Khanna speaks of Europe as a united entity, but fails to realize how something as simple as a European constitution cannot be passed by a major state such as Britain. Overall, this is simply a repackaging of all the multipolar arguments we’ve been hearing for decades…
— Juninho Feb 4, 11:19 PM #
Khanna is an anti-american and he makes me sick.
— Carolyn Feb 18, 11:27 AM #
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