Home
Search of Monsters to Destroy: the Folly American Empire and Paths Peace
Loading Inventory...
Barnes and Noble
Search of Monsters to Destroy: the Folly American Empire and Paths Peace
Current price: $24.95
Barnes and Noble
Search of Monsters to Destroy: the Folly American Empire and Paths Peace
Current price: $24.95
Loading Inventory...
Size: Hardcover
*Product Information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, and additional information please contact Barnes and Noble
"With
In Search of Monsters to Destroy
, Christopher Coyne offers readers a crisp, concise, and devastating indictment of American imperialism. His provocative proposal for a nonviolent ‘polycentric’ approach to national security comes as a welcome bonus.”
—
Andrew J. Bacevich
, President and Chairman of the Board, Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft; Professor Emeritus of International Relations and History, Boston University
Imperialism and militarism build empires, not liberalism.
So says
Christopher Coyne,
Senior Fellow at the Independent Institute and Professor of Economics at George Mason University, in this eye-opening, must-read book on America’s recent foreign policy failures.
After 9/11, the United States tried to establish liberal political regimes in the Middle East and in the mountains of Afghanistan—but the effort, according to Coyne, was doomed to fail. And his logic is simple.
Illiberal means
,
such as:
industrial-scale violence
the destruction of international norms
and partnerships with brutal, oppressive regimes
can lead only to
illiberal ends
.
What else are the hundreds of thousands of dead and mutilated civilians the US left behind in the Middle East and Central Asia? What else are the destroyed ancient cultures and nearly obliterated nation-states? Coyne also points out that the illiberal perpetrators can end up nearly bankrupt and humiliated in the process—and profoundly less secure.
Sound familiar?
Coyne insists that, if we do not absorb these truths, the rest of the 21st-century will be a repeat of its bloodstained, unstable beginning.
But Coyne is no isolationist.
He insists there are workable, proven alternatives to imperialism, militarism, and empire—ones that preserve freedom, promote security, and foster mutually enriching friendship among the nations of the earth. These alternatives stand in stark and admirable opposition to our current militaristic culture, proving that nonviolent approaches to domestic and international conflicts not only minimize violence, but also promote cultures of peace throughout the world.
Read
In Search of Monsters to Destroy,
and you’ll never look at the nation state or international relations the same again.
In Search of Monsters to Destroy
, Christopher Coyne offers readers a crisp, concise, and devastating indictment of American imperialism. His provocative proposal for a nonviolent ‘polycentric’ approach to national security comes as a welcome bonus.”
—
Andrew J. Bacevich
, President and Chairman of the Board, Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft; Professor Emeritus of International Relations and History, Boston University
Imperialism and militarism build empires, not liberalism.
So says
Christopher Coyne,
Senior Fellow at the Independent Institute and Professor of Economics at George Mason University, in this eye-opening, must-read book on America’s recent foreign policy failures.
After 9/11, the United States tried to establish liberal political regimes in the Middle East and in the mountains of Afghanistan—but the effort, according to Coyne, was doomed to fail. And his logic is simple.
Illiberal means
,
such as:
industrial-scale violence
the destruction of international norms
and partnerships with brutal, oppressive regimes
can lead only to
illiberal ends
.
What else are the hundreds of thousands of dead and mutilated civilians the US left behind in the Middle East and Central Asia? What else are the destroyed ancient cultures and nearly obliterated nation-states? Coyne also points out that the illiberal perpetrators can end up nearly bankrupt and humiliated in the process—and profoundly less secure.
Sound familiar?
Coyne insists that, if we do not absorb these truths, the rest of the 21st-century will be a repeat of its bloodstained, unstable beginning.
But Coyne is no isolationist.
He insists there are workable, proven alternatives to imperialism, militarism, and empire—ones that preserve freedom, promote security, and foster mutually enriching friendship among the nations of the earth. These alternatives stand in stark and admirable opposition to our current militaristic culture, proving that nonviolent approaches to domestic and international conflicts not only minimize violence, but also promote cultures of peace throughout the world.
Read
In Search of Monsters to Destroy,
and you’ll never look at the nation state or international relations the same again.