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ID106792
Title ProperStaying power and the American future
Other Title Informationproblems of primacy, policy, and grand strategy
LanguageENG
AuthorLieber, Robert J
Publication2011.
Summary / Abstract (Note)Many scholars, strategists and pundits contend that the US is in decline. They argue that America's national capabilities are significantly eroding, and that with the rise of important regional powers, its primacy in world affairs is rapidly diminishing as well. Yet America continues to possess significant advantages in critical sectors such as economic size, technology, competitiveness, demography, force size, power projection, military technology, and in the societal capacity to innovate and adapt. This article argues that the nature of material problems has been overstated, and that the US should be able to withstand modest erosion in its relative strength for some time to come without losing its predominant status. Instead, where limits to American primacy do exist, they are as or more likely to be ideational as they are material. The problem inheres as much or more in elite and societal beliefs, policy choices, and political will, as in economic, technological or manpower limitations at home, or the rise of peer competitors abroad.
`In' analytical NoteJournal of Strategic Studies Vol. 34, No. 4; Aug 2011: p509-530
Journal SourceJournal of Strategic Studies Vol. 34, No. 4; Aug 2011: p509-530
Key WordsPrimacy ;  Decline ;  Grand Strategy ;  Primacy Policy ;  America


 
 
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