Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:1233Hits:19122469Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Article   Article
 

ID144266
Title ProperHegemony, military power projection and US structural economic interests in the periphery
LanguageENG
AuthorCypher, James M
Summary / Abstract (Note)Positing the dawning of a ‘post-American World’, ‘declinists’ have taken little account of the USA’s surging interventionist tendencies and the new political economy of military power arising from the relentless pursuit of global militarism. The USA has long exercised its competitive advantage in military power to enhance its diplomatic clout, as well as to advantageously reposition its national industrial and financial base. The pace of such martial efforts has accelerated as US policy makers, employing a ‘deep engagement’ grand strategy, strive for paradigm maintenance and geopolitical expansion within the periphery. Interventions have been facilitated through new processes and procedures, carefully constructed to create a sufficient degree of autonomy to permit the US state to ‘project power’ without broad societal resistance. US policy is path-dependent, locked into a reflexive pattern, unable and unwilling to learn from its long string of blunders and delusionary adventures. But US policy makers do not suffer a loss of will-to-power, as neo-conservatives allege.
`In' analytical NoteThird World Quarterly Vol. 37, No.5; May 2016: p.800-817
Journal SourceThird World Quarterly Vol: 37 No 5
Key WordsHegemony ;  Power Projection ;  Periphery ;  National Security State ;  Iron Triangle ;  Global Militarism


 
 
Media / Other Links  Full Text