The Global Village Myth : Distance, War, and the Limits of Power
معرفی کتاب «The Global Village Myth : Distance, War, and the Limits of Power» نوشتهٔ Patrick Porter، منتشرشده توسط نشر Georgetown University Press در سال 2015. این کتاب در فرمت pdf، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است.
According to security elites, revolutions in information, transport, and weapons technologies have shrunk the world, leaving the United States and its allies more vulnerable than ever to violent threats like terrorism or cyberwar. As a result, they practice responses driven by fear: theories of falling dominoes, hysteria in place of sober debate, and an embrace of preemptive war to tame a chaotic world. Patrick Porter challenges these ideas. In The Global Village Myth , he disputes globalism's claims and the outcomes that so often waste blood and treasure in the pursuit of an unattainable "total" security. Porter reexamines the notion of the endangered global village by examining Al-Qaeda's global guerilla movement, military tensions in the Taiwan Strait, and drones and cyberwar, two technologies often used by globalists to support their views. His critique exposes the folly of disastrous wars and the loss of civil liberties resulting from the globalist enterprise. Showing that technology expands rather than shrinks strategic space, Porter offers an alternative outlook to lead policymakers toward more sensible responses―and a wiser, more sustainable grand strategy. Porter challenges the powerful ideology of "Globalism" that is widely subscribed to by the US national security community. Globalism entails visions of a perilous shrunken world in which security interests are interconnected almost without limit, exposing even powerful states to instant war. Globalism does not just describe the world, but prescribes expansive strategies to deal with it, portraying a fragile globe that the superpower must continually tame into order. Porter argues that this vision of the world has resulted in the US undertaking too many unnecessary military adventures and dangerous strategic overstretch. Distance and geography should be some of the factors that help the US separate the important from the unimportant in international relations. The US should also recognize that, despite the latest technologies, projecting power over great distances still incurs frictions and costs that set real limits on American power. Reviving an appreciation of distance and geography would lead to a more sensible and sustainable grand strategy. Introduction : strife in the village So near, so far : physical and strategic distance Wars for the world : the rise of globalism: 1941, 1950, 2001 Lost in space : Al Qaeda and the limits of netwar Access denied : technology, terrain and the barriers to conquest Wide of the mark : drones, cyber and the tyrannies of distance Conclusion : the geopolitics of hubris.
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