Title: I : 21.
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2- I ???????? ????? ?????? ??? ? ???????? ?????????
?? ??????? 21. ???? - II ????????? ????? ???? ?????? ????????
????? ?????? - III ???? ?? ???? 21. ????
- IV ??????????
3I ???????? ????? ?????? ??? ? ???????? ?????????
?? ??????? 21. ????
4- Jo? ?? ??????? ??????? ???? ?? ???????? ???????
????? ???? ?? ???? ?????? ????? ??????. ?????
?????? ???????? The Economist, ????????? ??????
?? ?????????? ?????? ????? ??????. ??? ??????????
??????????, ????????? ? ?????????????? ??????
???????? ?? ???????????? ? ?????, ?????? ?????
??? ?? ??? ?????? (????? ???) - (Paul Kennedy) Nothing has ever existed like
this disparity of power nothing. I have returned
to all of the comparative defense spending and
military personnel statistics over the past 500
years that I compiled in The Rise and Fall of the
Great Powers, and no other nation comes close.
The Pax Britannica was run on the cheap,
Britain's army was much smaller than European
armies, and even the Royal Navy was equal only to
the next two navies-right now all the other
navies in the world combined could not dent
American maritime supremacy.Charlemagne's empire
was merely Western European in its reach. The
Roman empire stretched farther afield, but there
was another great empire in Persia, and a larger
one in China. There is, therefore, no
comparison.
5- ????????? ???????? ?????? ??? ?????? ???????
????????? - ????????? ???????? ?????? ??? ??????? ????????
- The United St?tes of America as country in
position of primacy - ????????? ???????? ?????? ??? ????? ???? ?? ?
???????? ???????? ????????
6- Foreign Minister Hubert Vedrine says that he now
defines the United States as a "hyperpower," a
new term that he thinks best describes "a country
that is dominant or predominant in all
categories. - "Superpower," in his view, was a Cold War word
that reflected military capabilities of both the
Soviet Union and the United States. But now, the
breadth of American strength is unique, extending
beyond economics, technology or military might to
"this domination of attitudes, concepts, language
and modes of life. - Mr. Vedrine described France as a "power of world
influence," situated in a category coming
immediately after the United States, and
including, he declared, "Germany, Britain,
Russia, Japan, India, and perhaps others." - ????????? ???????? ?????? ??? Überpower (Josef
Joffe)
7 1.1. ???? ????????? ?????????
8?????? ????, ?????????...
9- ???? ?????? ???? ?? ??????????, ?????? ???? ??
???????? ?? ?? ???? ?? ???? ????? ?????? ???????
(??? ??????) - Great Powers, as the words suggest, are the most
influential states in the international system at
any one time (Martin Griffiths, Terry O
Callaghan)
10- ?????? ?????? ???? ?? ???? ??? ?????????? ??
?????? ????????, 1815. ?????? - ?????a ???a ????? ???? ?? ? ????? ?? ????
?????????????? ??? ?? ???? ?????? ??????? ??????,
? ?? ?? ??? ???? ????? ??? ?? ??????????, ? ???
??? ?? ???? ?? ?????? ?????? ??????? ???????????
?????? ? ???????????? ??????? ????? ???????. ??
??????? ?????????? ??????, ??????? ?? ????? ?? ??
?????????????? ????????? ? ???? ?????? ????? ?
?????? ?????? ?? ????? ?? ? ???? ???????? ???
?????? ????. (??? ?????????)
11- ???? ?? ????? ? ??????????? ??????? ????????????
??????, ????????? ??????? ????????? ???????? ??
?????? ???? ????? ??????? ???? ???? ?? ???
???????????? (?????-????????? ??????????) ?
?????? ?? ????????????? ????? ????????? ???????
????. ?? ???????? ???????, ?????? ?? ??????? W.
T.R. Fox 1944. ??????. ?????? W. T.R. Fox, The
Super-Powers The United States, Britain and
Soviet Union- their Responsibility for the Peace,
Harcourt, Brace, New York, 1944. ???????? ?????
Graham Evans, Jeffrey Newnham, The Penguin
Dictionary of International Relations, Penguin
Books, London, 1999,
12- We proposing the following definitional criteria
for a three-tiered scheme superpowers and the
great powers at the system level, and regional
powers at the regional level (Barry Buzan) - Superpowers The criteria for superpower status
are demanding that they require broad- spectrum
capabilities exercised across the whole
international system. Superpowers must possess
first- class military political capabilities
(as measured by the standards of the day), and
the economies to support such capabilities
13????????
14- Empires, more than nation-states, are the
principal actors in the history of world events.
Much of what we call history consists of the
deeds of the 50 to 70 empires that once ruled
multiple peoples across large chunks of the
globe. - Officially, there are no empires now, only 190-
plus nation-states. Yet the ghosts of empires
past continue to stalk the Earth.
15- Imperije su oblici politicke kontrole nad
efektivnim suverenitetom nekih politickih
drutava koje im namecu druga politicka drutva
(Majkl Dojl) - Sve imperije koje su tokom vekova uspostavljene
imale su tri zajednicka obeleja jedno se
ocituje u podredivanju, svaka imperija je
nejednak odnos, pri cemu je jedna strana
superiorna a druga inferiorna. Drugo se ogleda u
prinudi. Iako veliki broj imperija ukljucuje i
saradnju, katkad ekstenzivnu saradnju izmedu onih
koji vladaju i onih kojima se vlada, iza toga
odnosa uvek stoji pretnja silom, koja se katkad i
realizuje, od strane imperije u cilju odravanja
vlastite kontrole. Trece odredujuce obeleje
sastoji se u etnickoj, religioznoj ili rasnoj
razlici ili u nekoj njihovoj kombinaciji
izemdu imperijalne sile i drutva koje ona
kontrolie. Imperija je oblik diktature, ali
osobenog tipa diktature koju sprovode stranci. - Pojam vlada koji potice od grcke reci za
krmaniti, stariji je nego termin imperija koji se
izvodi iz latinske reci komandovati Vlada je
optiji pojam imperija je samo jedna od mnogih
oblika vladavine. (Majkl Mandelbaum) - Naglasak na kvalitetu odnosa izmedu politickih
jedinica a ne samo na kvantitetu. Imperija moe
biti i regionalna po svom obimu
16- Empire is the rule exercised by one nation over
others both to regulate their external behavior
and to ensure minimally acceptable forms of
internal behavior within the subordinate states.
Merely powerful states do the former, but not the
latter. (Stephen Peter Rosen)
17- AN EMPIRE is a multinational or multiethnic state
that extends its influence through formal and
informal control of other polities. The Indian
writer Nirad Chaudhuri put it well "There is no
empire without a conglomeration of
linguistically, racially, and culturally
different nationalities and the hegemony of one
of them over the rest. The heterogeneity and the
domination are of the very essence of imperial
relations. An empire is hierarchical. There may
be in it, and has been, full or partial freedom
for individuals or groups to rise from one level
to another but this has not modified the stepped
and stratified structure of the organization.
(Eliot A. Cohen)
18Primacy
19- Kao posledica rata u Iraku 2003. godine, drugi
analiticari opisuju medunarodni poredak kao
Americku svetsku imperiju. Na mnogo nacina
metafora o imperiji je privlacna. Americka vojska
ima globalni domaaj, sa bazama irom sveta i
njihovim regionalnim komandantima koji ponekad
deluju kao prokonzuli. Engleski je lingua franca
kao to je to svojevremeno bio Latinski jezik.
Americka ekonomija je najveca na svetu, a
americka kultura je magnet drugim kulturama.
Ipak, pogreno je pomeati politiku prvenstva sa
politikom imperije. Sjedinjene Americke Drave
zasigurno nisu imperija na nacin na koji mi
mislimo o evropskim prekomorskim imperijama iz
devetnaestog i dvadesetog veka, jer je sutinska
osobina takvog imperijalizma bila politicka
kontrola nad ostalim delovima planete. Iako
odnosi u kojima postoji nejednakost zasigurno
postoje izmedu Sjedinjenih Drava i slabijih sila
i lako mogu dovesti do jednog eksploatatorskog
odnosa sa americke strane, odsustvo formalne
politicke kontrole nad tim dravama, cini termin
"imperijalna" ne samo nedovoljno tacnim, nego i
potpuno pogrenim...
20- Sjedinjene Americke Drave imaju vie izvora moci
nego to ih je imala Velika Britanija na vrhuncu
svoje imperijalne moci, ali Sjedinjene Drave
imaju manje moci u smislu kontrole nad ponaanjem
i unutranjom politikom drugih zemalja, nego to
je to imala Britanija u doba kada je vladala
cetvrtinom Planete. Na primer, kole u Keniji,
izbori, proces donoenja zakona i ubiranje poreza
- da ne pominjemo spoljnu politiku zemlje - bili
su pod kontrolom britanskih zvanicnika. U
poredenju sa tim, Sjedinjene Drave imaju malo
takve kontrole u dananje vreme. Tokom 2003.
godine Sjedinjene Drave nisu cak uspele da
zadobiju glasove Meksika i Kine za drugu
rezoluciju o Iraku u Savetu bezbednosti
Ujedinjenih Nacija. Analiticari imperije
odgovaraju da je termin "imperija" samo metafora.
Ipak, problem sa tom metaforom jeste da ona
podrazumeva kontrolu iz Vaingtona koja se teko
uklapa sa sloenim nacinom na koji je moc u svetu
danas raspodeljena... (Dozef Naj)
21- The U. S. Position in the current World order is
best understood as one of primacy. The United
Stets is not a global hegemon, because it cannot
physically control the entire globe and thus
cannot compel other states to do whatever it
wants Nonetheless, the United States is also
something more than first among equals If
primacy is defined as being first in order,
importance or authority or holding first or
chief place, then it is an apt description of
Americas current position. (Stephen M. Walt)
22??????????
23- Americans, in short, don't "do" empire they do
"leadership" instead, or, in more academic
parlance, "hegemony." - According to S. Ryan Johansson, the word
"hegemony" was used originally to describe the
relationship of Athens to the other Greek
city-states that joined it in an alliance against
the Persian Empire. "Hegemony" in this case
"meant that Athens organized and directed
their combined efforts without securing permanent
political power over the others. - By contrast, according to the "world-system
theory" of Immanuel Wallerstein, "hegemony" means
more than mere leadership but less than outright
empire. A hegemonic power is "a state ... able to
impose its set of rules on the interstate system,
and thereby create temporarily a new political
order." The hegemon also offers "certain extra
advantages for enterprises located within it or
protected by it, advantages not accorded by the
'market' but obtained through political pressure."
24- Yet another, narrower definition is offered by
Geoffrey Pigman. Pigman describes a hegemon's
principal function as underwriting a liberal
international trading system that is beneficial
to the hegemon but, paradoxically, even more
beneficial to its potential rivals. Pigman traces
this now widely used definition of the word back
to the economic historian Charles Kindleberger's
seminal work on the interwar economy, which
describes a kind of "hegemonic interregnum."
After 1918, Kindleberger suggested, the United
Kingdom was too weakened by war to remain an
effective hegemon, but the United States was
still too inhibited by protectionism and
isolationism to take over the role. This idea,
which became known, somewhat inelegantly, as
"hegemonic stability theory," was later applied
to the post-1945 period by authors such as Arthur
Stein, Susan Strange, Henry Nau, and Joseph Nye.
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261.2. The Foundations of American Primacy
27- By virtually any measure, the United States
enjoys an asymmetry of power unseen since the
emergence of the modern states system. Some
leading powers in the past had gained an
advantage in one dimension or another for
example, in 1850 Great Britain controlled about
70 percent of Europes Wealth, while the number
two power, France, controlled only 16 percent
but the United States is the only Great Power in
modern history to establish a clear lead in
virtually every important dimension of power
28- The United States has the worlds largest
economy, an overwhelming military advantage, a
dominant position in key international
institutions, and far reaching cultural and
ideological influence. Moreover, these advantages
are magnified by a favorable geopolitical
position. If primacy is defined as being first
in order, importance or authority or holding
first or chief place, then it is an apt
description of Americas current position.
(Stephen M. Walt)
291.2.1. Economic Dominance
30- Economic strength as foundation of national power
- The United States has been blessed with the
worlds largest for over a century - The U.S. share of global production ballooned to
nearly 50 percent after World War II reflecting
the damage that other countries suffered during
the war and then gradually declined as the rest
of the world recovered. Nevertheless, it has
hovered between 25 and 30 percent from the 1960
to the present, and the U. S. Economy is still
the roughly 60 percent larger than its nearest
rival, Japan. - The U. S. Economy is also more diverse and
self-sufficient than other major economic powers,
making it less vulnerable to the unexpected
economic shifts - Although the United States is more dependent on
the outside world than it was a generation ago,
it still depends far less on others than they
depend on it
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33- In 2000, for example, only three countries had
lower ratios of trade to gross domestic product
(GDP) than the United States, and only one of
them was a major military power. with
Argentina, Brazil and Japan - For example, Chinese exports to the United States
were a whopping 5 percent of Chinese GDP (19
percent of total Chinese exports) and critical to
Chinese economic growth. U. S. exports to China,
by contrast, were a mere 0. 16 percent of U. S.
GDP
34- A state can be wealthy without being powerful, of
course think of Brunei, Kuwait, or Switzerland
but it is impossible to be a Great Power
without a large diverse economy. In particular, a
strong economy enables a state to create and
equip a powerful military force.
351.2.2. Military Supremacy Command of the Commons
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37- Today the United States is not only the world s
foremost economic power it is the dominant
military power as well - While Americas military economic advantages are
manifold, its military lead is simply
overwhelming. - U. S. Defense expenditures in 2003 were nearly 40
percent of the global total and almost seven
times larger than that of the number two power
(China). To put it another way, U. S. Defense
spending was equal to the amount spent on defense
by the next thirteen countries combined. - The United States also spends more to keep itself
in the vanguard of military technology. The U. S.
Department of Defense now spends over 50 billion
dollars annually for research, development,
testing, and evaluation, an amount larger than
the entire defense budget of Germany, Great
Britain, France, Russia, Japan or China
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39- The United States deployed more than 500 000
troops in the Persian Gulf for Operations Desert
Shield and Desert Storm mobilized substantial
air, ground, and naval forces in Kosovo in 1999,
and in Afghanistan in 2001 and then deployed
more than 180 000 troops and other personnel to
topple Saddam Hussein in 2003. - Over - Sea power projection capabilities
40- The United States has the largest and most
sophisticated arsenal of strategic nuclear
weapons, and it is the only country with global
power projection capability, stealth aircraft, a
large arsenal of precision guided munitions, and
integrated surveillance, reconnaissance, and
command-and-control capabilities.
41 Command of the Commons- Military foundation
of U. S. Hegemony
42- One pillar of U.S. hegemony is the vast military
power of the United States. - The U.S. military currently possesses command of
the global commons. Command of the commons is
analogous to command of the sea, or in Paul
Kennedys words, it is analogous to naval
mastery. The commons, in the case of the sea
and space, are areas that belong to no one state
and that provide access to much of the globe.
Airspace does technically belong to the countries
below it, but there are few countries that can
deny their airspace above 15,000 feet to U.S.
warplanes. Command does not mean that other
states cannot use the commons in peacetime. Nor
does it mean that others cannot acquire military
assets that can move through or even exploit them
when unhindered by the United States. Command
means that the United States gets vastly more
military use out of the sea, space, and air than
do others that it can credibly threaten to deny
their use to others and that others would lose a
military contest for the commons if they
attempted to deny them to the United States.
Having lost such a contest, they could not mount
another effort for a very long time, and the
United States would preserve, restore, and
consolidate its hold after such a fight.
43- Command of the commons is the key military
enabler of the U.S. global power position. It
allows the United States to exploit more fully
other sources of power, including its own
economic and military might as well as the
economic and military might of its allies. - Command of the commons also helps the United
States to weaken its adversaries, by restricting
their access to economic, military, and political
assistance. Command of the commons has permitted
the United States to wage war on short notice
even where it has had little permanent military
presence. This was true of the 1991 Persian Gulf
War, the 1993 intervention in Somalia, and the
2001 action in Afghanistan.
44Command Of The Sea
45- U.S. nuclear attack submarines (SSNs) are perhaps
the key assets of U.S. open ocean antisubmarine
warfare (ASW) capability, which in turn is the
key to maintaining command of the sea. - At more than 1 billion each (more than 2
billion each for the new U.S. SSN), modern
nuclear submarines are prohibitively expensive
for most states. Aside from the United States,
Britain, China, France, and Russia are the only
other countries that can build them, and China is
scarcely able. Several partially built nuclear
attack submarines remained in Russian yards in
the late 1990s, but no new ones have been laid
down. Perhaps 2030 Russian nuclear attack
submarines remain in service. Currently, the U.S.
Navy has 54 SSNs in service and 4 under
construction.
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48- The U.S. Navy also dominates the surface of the
oceans, with 12 aircraft carriers (9 nuclear
powered) capable of launching high-performance
aircraft. - In Saturday, October 7, 2006, George H. W. Bush
13th U. S. aircraft carrier, Nimitz class,
nuclear powered - was christened.
49- The Carrier Mission is- To provide a credible,
sustainable, independent forward presence and
conventional deterrence in peacetime,- To
operate as the cornerstone of joint/allied
maritime expeditionary forces in times of crisis,
and- To operate and support aircraft attacks on
enemies, protect friendly forces and engage in
sustained independent operations in war.
50- The Soviet Union was just building its first true
aircraft carrier when its political system
collapsed. Aside from France, which has 1, no
other country has any nuclear-powered aircraft
carriers. At 5 billion apiece for a single U.S.
Nimitz-class nuclearpowered aircraft carrier,
this is no surprise.
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55- Moreover, the U.S. Navy operates for the Marine
Corps a feet of a dozen large helicopter/VSTOL
carriers, each almost twice the size of the Royal
Navys comparable (3 ship) Invincible class. To
protect its aircraft carriers and amphibious
assets, the U.S. Navy has commissioned 37 Arleigh
- Burkeclass destroyers since 1991billion-dollar
multimission platforms capable of antiair,
antisubmarine, and land-attack missions in
high-threat environments. - 24 This vessel is surely the most capable surface
combatant in the world.
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57Command Of The Air
58- and electronic intelligence aircraft allows the
U.S military to achieve the suppression of enemy
air defenses (SEAD) limit the effectiveness of
enemy radars, surface-to-air missiles (SAMs) and
fighters and achieve the relatively safe
exploitation of enemy skies above 15,000 feet.
Cheap and simple air defense weapons, such as
antiaircraft guns and shoulderred lightweight
SAMs, are largely ineffective at these altitudes.
Yet at these altitudes aircraft can deliver
precision-guided munitions with great accuracy
and lethality, if targets have been properly
located and identified.
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62Command of the Space
63- Though the United States is not yet committed to
actual combat in or from space, it spends vast
amounts on reconnaissance, navigation, and
communications satellites. - These satellites provide a standing
infrastructure to conduct military operations
around the globe.
64- the United States had 100 military satellites and
150 commercial satellites in space in 2001,
nearly half of all the active satellites in
space. - According to Air Force Lt. Gen. T. Michael
Moseley, air component commander in the U.S.-led
invasion of Iraq in March 2003, more than 50
satellites supported land, sea, and air
operations in every aspect of the campaign.
65- For fiscal years 200207, the Pentagon plans to
spend 165 billion on space-related activities. - The NAVSTAR/GPS (global positioning system)
constellation of satellites, designed and
operated by the U.S. military but now widely
utilized for civilian purposes, permits highly
precise navigation and weapons guidance anywhere
in the world. Full exploitation of GPS by other
military and civilian users is permitted
electronically by the United States, but this
permission is also electronically revocable. It
will not be easy for others to produce a
comparable system, though the European Union
intends to try. GPS cost 4.2 billion (in 1979
prices) to bring to completion, significantly
more money than was originally projected.
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68- Hoewer, below 15,000 feet, within several hundred
kilometers of the shore, and on the land, a
contested zone awaits United States. The U.S.
military hopes that it can achieve the same
degree of dominance in this zone as it has in the
commons, though this is unlikely to happen.
691.2.3. Institutional Influence
70- The norms and rules that govern these
institutions will prevent any single state (or
group of states) from controlling them
completely, yet the United States plays a unique
role in the most important global organizations. - UN
- WTO
- NATO
- 22 percent of UN budget
71- Who determines agenda of something, he is
powerful - IMF, World bank
- The record of landing from both institutions
strongly supports a pattern of U. S. interests
and preferences
721.2.4. Cultural and Ideological Impact
73- Another key advantage for the United States is
its ability to shape the preferences of others
to make them want what America wants through
the inherent attractiveness of U. S. culture,
ideology and institutions. - The soft power is remains hard to define or
measure, but there is a little doubt that the
United States casts a long cultural and
ideological shadow over the rest of the world. - English as a lingua franca
- American University system as a potent mechanism
for socializing foreign elites
74- Nearly 600 000 foreign students at American
universities in 2002/2003 - If there is a global civilization, it is
American. Nor is it just McDonalds and
Hollywood, it is also Microsoft and Harvard.
Wealthy Romans used to send their children to
Greek Universities todays Greeks, that is, the
Europeans, send their kids to Roman, that is,
American Universities. - As of 2004, the top twenty five highest-grossing
films of all times were U. S. productions - American consumer products and brand names are
ubiquitous - Free market and democratic governance become a
world model - American way of life as a world way of life
751.2.5. The Blessing of Geography
76- Economic, military, institutional and cultural
dominance may define U. S. Primacy, but its
geopolitical situation is the icing on the cake. - The United States is the only Power in the
Western Hemisphere, and it is physically
separated from the other major powers by two
enormous oceanic moats
77- America is blessed among the nations. On the
north, she had a weak neighbor on the south,
another weak neighbor on the east fish, and the
west, fish (Jules Jusseraud, French Ambassador
to the U.S., 1925.) - Because the other major powers lie in close
proximity to one another, they are inclined to
worry more about each other than they do about
the United States.
78- T?????? ????????? ?????? ?????? ?? ?? ??????,
??????? ?????? ?????????? ??? ?????? ???? ??
?????? ????????. ?????? ?? ??????? ?? ??????
???? ??????? ?????? ????, ??????? (????? ?? ??
?????????? ??????? ????? ???? ?? ?????? ???
?????? ? ?????? ?? ???? ?? ?????? ?????????),
?????????? ?????? ?????????? ???? ???????? ?
???????????? ?????? (Stephen M. Walt)
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801.2.6. ????????
81- ?? ?? ?? ?? ?????? ????? ????? ? ?????? ???
????, ?? ?????? ?? ????? ??? ?????????? ???? ????
? ?????????, ??? ??????????? ?? ???????? ?? ??
???? ?????? ???????? ???? ??? ???? ???? ?? ??.
(??? ??????, ??????? ???????????????? ?????)
82- Drugi problem tice se odredivanja koji resursi
pruaju najbolju osnovu za moc u nekom odredenom
kontekstu. Resursi moci uvek zavise od konteksta.
Tenkovi nisu tako dobri u mocvarama u
devetnaestom veku uranijum nije bio resurs moci.
U ranijim razdobljima ljudske istorije bilo je
lake suditi o vrednosti izvora moci. (Dozef
Naj)
83?????? ?????? ????
- ??? ?????? ?? ?????????
- ????????? ??????? ????
- The second face of power
84- ??? ?????? ?? ?????????
- ????????? ??????? ????
- The second face of power
851.3. ????????
86- U globalnom informatickom dobu, moc je medu
dravama raspodeljena po obrascu koji podseca na
sloenu trodimenzionalnu ahovsku tablu, na kojoj
se igra odvija i horizontalno i vertikalno. Na
vrhu ahovske table gde su politicko-vojna
pitanja, vojna moc je uglavnom unipolarna sa
Sjedinjenim Dravama kao jedinom supersilom, ali
u sredini table gde su ekonomska pitanja,
Sjedinjene Drave nisu hegemon ili imperija, i
moraju da se cenjkaju sa Evropom sa jednakih
pozicija kada Evropa deluje kao ujedinjena
celina. Na primer, povodom antimonopolskih ili
pitanja koja se odnose na privredu, one moraju
naci kompromis, da bi postigle sporazum. I na dnu
table transnacionalnih odnosa koji prelaze
granice van kontrole vlada drava i tako
ukljucuju raznovrsne aktere kao to su bankari i
teroristi, moc se haoticno rasprava. Uzmimo kao
dodatak pitanjima terorizma samo nekoliko
primera privatni akteri na globalnom tritu
kapitala ogranicavaju nacin na koji se kamatne
stope mogu koristiti za upravljanje americkom
ekonomijom, a trgovina droge, AIDS, migracija
stanovnitva, i globalno zagrevanje koji imaju
duboke drutvene korene u vie od jedne zemlje,
izvan su kontrole americkih vlasti. U takvoj
jednoj situaciji cini se da nema ba puno smisla
koristiti tradicionalne termine poput
unipolarnost, hegemonija ili imperija s ciljem da
se opiu takvi problemi. (Dozef Naj)
87?? ?? ??????? ???? ? ???? ?? ???? ???????
?????????
- T?? ???????? ?? ?????? ?? ????????? ????????
?????? ????? ?????????, ? ??? ? ???? ??
??????????? ????????? ??? ????? ?? ???????
??????? ????????. ????? ???????? ?????? ??
??????? ???? ?? ???????? ?????? ?????,
????????? ???????? ? ???????? ????? (????? ?? ??
????? ???????????????? ????? ??????????? ?? ????
????? ? ?? ??????? ??????? ??????). - ?? ?????? ?????? ????????? ?? 1920. ?????? (?
????? ?????? ??????? ?????? ? ?????) ????? ??????
??????? ?? 23 ?????????? ?????, ????? ?????
?????? ???????? ?????? ?????? ?? 210 ???????.
??????? ???? ? ???? ?? ?????????? ?????? ???????
???? ?????? ???? (??? ????? ???? ???? ??????????
?????? 15 ? 24. ?????? ???? ???? ??? ??????????),
??? ?? ??????? ? ????, ????? ??, ?? ???
??????????? ?? ???? ?????? ?????? ????? ???? ??
????? ????????? ????? ???????? ????????????.
88- ??????, ?? ????? ?? ?? ???? ?????????? ???? ?
??????????, ??? ? ???????? ?????????? ????????
????????? ??? ????? ???????? ?????????? ???
????????? ? ?????????? ????????? (?????? ?? ?? ??
? ???????? ???? ??????), ??????? ???? ?????? ??
????? 45 000 ????????? ??????, ?????? ??????
??????? ?????? ???? ??? ????? ????????? ?
??????????? ??? ????????? ? ???? ??? ?? ????
??????? ???????.
89- ????? ?????????? ??????????? ?????? ?????
??????????? ?? ?????? ?????????? ?????
(Associated Press- Ipsos poll), ???? 6 ?? 10
??????????? ???????? ?????? ???????? ? ???? ??
????? ??????? (????? ?? ?? ???????????? ?????? ??
11. ????????? 2001 ????. ?. ?.), ???????? ??
??? ?????? ?? ?? ???????? ????? ?????? ?????????
?????????, ??? 6 ?? 10 ?????????? ?????? ?? ??
??? ? ????? ????????? ???? ??? ???? ?????????????
?????????... ??????, ? ??? (Pew) ???????????
????????? ?? ?????? ??????????? ?????? ?? ??????
????? ?? ?? ????? ???????? ?? ?????????????
?????? ?? ????????? ???????? ?????? ???? ?? ??
?????? ??? ?? ?? ????? ???????? ????? ????????? ?
????????????, ??? ?????????? ????? ??????? ?
?????? ?? ?????? ??????????? ?? 2002. ??????.
90- ??????? ?? ??????? ?? ?? ?????? ?????????? ????
? ?o???????? (?????? ?????) - Myth of Empire (Myths of Security Through
Expansion) OFFENSIVE ADVANTAGE, POWER SHIFTS,
PAPER TIGER ENEMIES, BANDWAGONS , BIG STICK
DIPLOMACY, FALLING DOMINOES, EL DORADO AND
MANIFEST DESTINY, NO TRADEOFFS, - Jack L. Snyder
-
91- Nacionalizam kao rak rana imperija
- Imperije su icezle zato to su postale preskupe
(Majkl Mandelbaum) - Hierarchy is usually costly. Dominant states can
offer concessions to induce subordinates to give
up their valued freedom. The Soviet Union
rejected this course, at first, electing to
extract resources from Eastern Europe rather than
share its benefits from cooperation. Indeed, by
one estimate, Moscow withdrew nearly 1 billion
per year from the region until 1956. By the late
1950s, however, the flow of resources reversed,
and by the 1980s the Soviet Union was subsidizing
Eastern Europe to a total of about 17 billion
per year. (David Lake)
92- ??????????????? ?????? (Fareed Zakaria)
- ?????????? ????????? 2001. ??? ?? ????????
??????? ? ???????? ???????? ???? (Power
Politics). ?????????? ????????, ?? ????? ????
???? ???? ??????? ??????????, ?? ????????
???????????? ??????????, ??????? ?? ?????????? ?
?????????? ????????????? ??????? ???? ? ?????? ?
?????? ??????? ? ????? ????????? ?????. - ?????? ?????? ?????? ????? ???? ???? ????
?????? ???? ?????? ??????? ?? ???? ???????
??????????. ?? ???? ?????? ?? ?????? ???????
????????? ???? ?? ?????? ?? ???????????? ???? ??
??????? ???? ??? ???? ???????? ?????????
??????????. (Zbigniew Brzezinski)
93- A?????? ????? ????? ????? ??????????? ???????????
???? ?? ?????? ????????? ????????, ?? ???? ??
?????????? ???? ???? ????? ???? ????????
?????????? ?????????, ???? ??? ?? ?? ??? ??????
?? ??????? ???????????? ????,?. ? ?????? ??
????????? ?? ????? ? ???????????? ?? ??????????
?? ???? ?????????? ?????? ?????. - ???? ?? ?????????? ??????? ?? ???? ? ??????
?????????? ?????? (??????? ?????????) - ???????? ???????? ???? ????? ?????? ???????
????????? ?? ???? ????? (????? ???) - ???? ?? ?? ??????? ????????? ???????????
-
94- As we work our way through this seemingly
intractable problem in Iraq, we must constantly
remember that this is not just a troublesome
issue form which we can walk away if it seems too
costly to continue. What is at stake is not only
Iraq and the stability of the Middle East, but
the global perception of the reliability of the
United States as a partner in a deeply troubled
world. We cannot afford to fail this test And
this is why America cant just walk away. (Brent
Scowcroft, The International herald Tribune,
Thursday, January 4, 2007, p. 6)
95However, if the United States was not an Empire,
then what was it?(Niall Ferguson)
- What to do with Power, the question is now end,
everand, forever
96II ????????? ????? ???? ?????? ????????
????? ??????
97Power resources of the Major U. S. contenders,
2007
98(No Transcript)
99??? ????????
100(No Transcript)
101III ???? ?? ???? 21. ????
102- ?? ?? ?? ??? ???? ?????? ? ???????? ????????
?????????? (??????? ?????????) - ???????? ? ???????????? ????
- ?? ?? ?? ????? ? ??? ??????? ???? ????? ???
??????? - ??? ?? ???????? ???????????
- The 21st Century World as a World Without Power?
(Niall Ferguson) - ??? ????????
103IV ??????????
- Pol Kenedi, Uspon i pad velikih sila, CID
Podgorica, Slubeni List SRJ, Beograd, 1999 - Barry R. Posen, Command of the CommonsThe
Military Foundation of U. S. Hegemony,
International Security, Vol. 28, No. 1, Summer
2003, pp. 5 46. - Niall Ferguson, Colossus The Price of Americas
Empire, The Penguin Press, New York, 2004 - David Held, Mathias Koenig Archibugi, Eds.,
American Power in the 21st Century, Polity Press,
Cambridge, UK, 2003 - Stephen M. Walt, Taming American Power The
Global Response to American Primacy, W. W.
Norton, New York, 2005 - Thomas P. M. Barnett, The Pentagons New Map,
in Paul J. Bolt, Damon V. Colletta, Collings G.
Shackelford, Jr., American Defense Policy, The
Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore and
London, 2005, Eight Edition, pp. 66-69 - Barry Buzan, Ole Waever, Regions and Powers The
Structure of International Security, Cambridge
University Press, Cambridge, UK, 2003 - Robert D. Kaplan, Imperial Grunts the American
Military on the Ground, Random House, New York,
2005 - http//www.navy.mil/navydata/our_ships.asp
- William C. Wohlforth, U. S. Strategy in a
Unipolar World, in G. John Ikenberry, Ed.,
America Unrivaled The Future of the Balance of
Power, Cornell University Press, Ithaca, NY,
2002, pp. 98 -118. (osobito grafikoni na stranama
105, 111, 112 - Charles Crauthammer, Unipolar moment, Foreign
Affairs, Winter 1990/1991, pp. 23-33. - David Held, Mathias Koenig Archibugi,
Introduction Whither American Power?, in
David Held, Mathias Koenig Archibugi, Eds.,
American Power in the 21st Century, Polity Press,
Cambridge, UK, 2003, pp. 1- 20 - Niall Ferguson, Colossus The Price of Americas
Empire, The Penguin Press, New York, 2004, pp.
1-29 - Stephen M. Walt, Taming American Power The
Global Response to U. S. Primacy, W. W. Norton,
New York, 2005, pp. 11 61 - Charles Krauthammer, The Unipolar Moment
Revisited, The National Interest, Winter
2002/03, pp. 5 17 - Niall Ferguson, A World Without Power, Foreign
Policy, July / August 2004, pp. 32 -39 - Michael Mandelbaum, Davids Friend Goliath,
Foreign Policy, January / February 2006, pp. 50
56 - Niall Ferguson, Laurence J. Kotlikoff, Going
Critical American Power and the Consequences of
Fiscal Overstertch, The National Interest, Fall
2003, pp. 22- 32. - Brian Knowlton, In America, a Day to reflect on
impact of 9/11, International Herald Tribune,
Tuesday, September 12, 2006, p. 4.
104????? ?? ?????