The four ages of American foreign policy Weak power, great power, superpower, hyperpower

Michael Mandelbaum

Book - 2022

"Terrorist attacks on New York City and Washington D.C. on September 11, 2001, launched the United States into three wars: a global war on terror; a war in Afghanistan; and a war against Saddam Hussein's regime in Iraq. In both Afghanistan and Iraq American efforts to install stable, democratic, friendly governments encountered opposition, and the United States found itself fighting against insurgencies in both places. In 2008, a severe financial crisis struck America, which led to a prolonged global recession. By the end of this period, Russia, China, and Iran had begun to mount serious challenges to American interests in Europe, East Asia, and the Middle East respectively. This brought an end to the fourth age of American foreig...n policy"--

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Subjects
Published
New York, NY : Oxford University Press [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Michael Mandelbaum (author)
Physical Description
xiii, 610 pages ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 459-570) and index.
ISBN
9780197621790
  • Preface
  • Acknowledgmnets
  • Introduction
  • The First Age: Weak Power, 1765-1865
  • 1. Independence, 1765-1788
  • The Origins of the American Revolution
  • The Path to War
  • The North American War
  • The European War
  • The Constitution and Foreign Policy
  • 2. In the Shadow of the French Revolution, 1788-1815
  • The New Republic
  • Federalist Foreign Policy
  • Louisiana
  • Republican Foreign Policy
  • The War of 1812
  • 3. The Continental Republic, 1815-1865
  • The United States and Great Britain
  • Growth
  • Territorial Expansion
  • The Mexican War
  • The Civil War
  • The Second Age: Great Power, 1865-1945
  • 4. Great-Power Debut, 1865-1914
  • The Foundations of Great Power
  • Spheres of Influence
  • East Asia
  • Empire
  • Two Visions
  • 5. The Offshore Balancer, 1914-1933
  • The United States and World War I
  • The United States in World War I
  • The Peace Conference
  • Postwar Foreign Policy: Security
  • Postwar Foreign Policy: Economics
  • 6. The Arsenal of Democracy, 1933-1945
  • The Collapse of the Peace
  • The World at War
  • America at War
  • Reversal of Fortune
  • The Endgame
  • The Third Age: Superpower, 1945-1990
  • 7. The Contest of Systems, 1945-1953
  • Year Zero
  • The Creation of the West
  • The Origins of the Cold War
  • The Division of Asia
  • The Korean War
  • 8. War Improbable, Peace Impossible, 1953-1979
  • Learning to Live with the Bomb
  • A World Split in Three
  • The Vietnam War
  • Détente
  • Shocks
  • 9. A Superpower Dies in Bed, 1979-1990
  • Annus horribilis
  • Counterattack
  • The Crucial Decade
  • Détente II
  • The End of the Cold War
  • The Fourth Age: Hyperpower, 1990-2015
  • 10. The New World Order, 1990-2001
  • The Gulf War
  • Globalization
  • Humanitarian Intervention
  • Russia
  • The Middle East
  • 11. Back to the Future, 2001-2015
  • September 11 and Its Aftermath
  • Gulf War II
  • The Financial Crisis
  • The Reset
  • The End of the Post-Cold War Era
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Choice Review

Mandelbaum (School of Advanced International Studies, Johns Hopkins Univ.), author of The Rise and Fall of Peace on Earth (2019), here takes on the unenviable task of tracing the evolution of foreign policy, spanning colonial outrage over British taxation from 1765 to 2015. The author organizes this vast amount of time into four sections: "The First Age: Weak Power, 1765--1865"; "The Second Age: Great Power, 1865--1945"; "The Third Age: Superpower, 1945--1990"; and "The Fourth Age: Hyperpower, 1990--2015." In each section, Mandelbaum offers chronology mixed with traditional, or some might suggest, conservative viewpoints relative to what may or may not have been accomplished by elite groups of white men in power (President Obama is the exception) and those in the military who often paid for mistakes with their blood--e.g., the Vietnam War. Mandelbaum mentions the role of secret agencies in foreign affairs, namely the OSS, which became the CIA, but downplays their involvement. However, he is most discerning when describing the post--Cold War era. For additional information, readers should consult George C. Herring's Colony to Superpower: U.S. Foreign Relations Since 1976 (CH, May'09, 46-5224). Summing Up: Recommended. General readers through faculty; professionals. --Paul D. Travis, Texas Woman's University

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A magisterial history of international relations in American history. "The foreign policy of the United States…has been unusually ideolog-ical, unusually economic, and unusually democratic," writes Mandelbaum, professor emeritus at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies, with American leaders focused on ideals of liberty, human rights, and free elections. Comparatively weak for decades after the Revolution, America grew steadily, but it was the Civil War that caught the world's attention. American money and production helped assure the Allied victory in World War I. Less "isolationist" between the wars than many popular histories claim, American foreign policy emphasized fiscal responsibility and disarmament until the Depression, when democratic powers turned inward and Germany and Japan sought to vastly expand their positions on the global stage. In his account of World War II, Mandelbaum emphasizes America's own titanic expansion. By 1945, the U.S. manufactured 40% percent "of all the world's armaments" and had built the world's largest military. Then it was confronted by another superpower: the Soviet Union. Aided by conquests in Eastern Europe, a purported ally in Mao's China, and the growing appeal of Marxism, the rise of the Soviets convinced Americans that they were under threat. This led to two large, disastrous wars in Korea and Vietnam, many smaller confrontations, a reconciliation with China, and, eventually, the unexpected disintegration of the Soviet Union. In the 1990s, America was the world's unchallenged hyperpower, but the 21st century has been characterized by failure. The specter of terrorism, never a true military threat, obsessed American leaders, who plunged into expensive, fruitless wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. Mandelbaum painfully concludes that many so-called American ideals have lost their appeal. Across the globe, radical nationalism has surged, and autocrats, often freely elected, have assumed power in many nations. Jingoistic extremist movements are flourishing in Western Europe and the U.S., and China's rapid rise seems to have demoted America to superpower status or perhaps introduced another hyperpower. A deeply insightful--and disturbing--analysis of both history and current affairs. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.