书评

Pub Date : 2017-10-26 DOI:10.1515/phras-2017-0012
J. Balázsi, José-Manuel Pazos Bretaña, C. Pfeiffer, Elena Berthemet, José-Manuel Pazos Bretaña, Natalia Filatkina, Joanna Szerszunowicz, M. A. Ariza
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这本薄薄的书最初是在纽约公共图书馆发表的乔安娜·杰克逊·戈德曼纪念讲座,其中的文章对2001年9月11日恐怖袭击后的美国国家安全政策提供了一些历史视角,约翰·加迪斯正确地称之为“国家身份危机”(第10页),也是对统治安全学说的挑战。《惊奇、安全与美国经验》是一本典型的明智和发人深省的书,出自一位杰出的美国外交历史学家之手,尽管由于其出处和形式,其必然的框架论点往往更具启发性而非结论性,偶尔也会引人误解。加迪斯的中心论点是“对美国来说,安全来自于扩大而不是收缩其责任范围”(第13页)。他可能过于雄心勃勃地试图用这种学说来解释美国几乎所有的外交历史。他将该学说的起源追溯到另一次“突然袭击”,即1814年8月24日英国焚烧国会大厦和白宫。加迪斯说,该学说的主要设计者是国务卿(后来的总统)约翰·昆西·亚当斯,他的方法很简单:先发制人、单边主义和霸权。有人认为,在每一项指控中,前总统乔治·W·布什的另一个儿子都只是重新树立了亚当斯的传统,亚当斯是“19世纪最没有影响力的美国大战略家”(第15页)。先发制人“听起来是新的,只是因为它是旧的:这是一个19世纪的概念,植根于对国家不断扩大的边界安全的担忧”(第86页),尤其是海盗、抢劫印第安人、外国策划者以及佛罗里达州、得克萨斯州、,加州为他们提供了庇护。根据亚当斯对詹姆斯·门罗总统的建议,即放弃英国的合作提议,并宣布门罗主义是一项独特的美国信条,布什在伊拉克和其他地方的单边主义因此“重新回到了旧的立场,而不是新的立场的出现”(第26页)。至于霸权,加迪斯声称,亚当斯本想让美国统治西半球,但他认为布什总统2002年在西点军校发表的“美国拥有并打算保持超越挑战的军事实力”(第30页)完全符合他的观点。
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Book reviews
Originally delivered as the Joanna Jackson Goldman Memorial Lectures at New York Public Library, the essays in this slim volume offer some historical perspective on American national security policy following the terrorist attacks of 11 September 2001, which John Gaddis rightly calls “a national identity crisis” (p. 10) as well as a challenge to regnant security doctrines. Surprise, Security, and the American Experience is a characteristically judicious and thought-provoking book from a distinguished historian of American diplomacy, though, because of its provenance and format, its necessarily skeletal argument is often more suggestive than conclusive and is occasionally misleading. Gaddis’s central thesis is that “for the United States, safety comes from enlarging, rather than from contracting, its sphere of responsibilities” (p. 13). He perhaps too ambitiously attempts to explain almost all of America’s diplomatic history in terms of that doctrine. He traces the origins of the doctrine to another “surprise” attack, the British burning of the Capitol and the White House on 24 August 1814. The principal architect of the doctrine, says Gaddis, was Secretary of State (and later President) John Quincy Adams, whose methods were simple: preemption, unilateralism, and hegemony. On each of these counts, so the argument goes, another son of a former president, George W. Bush, has simply reclaimed the tradition of Adams, “the most inouential American grand strategist of the nineteenth century” (p. 15). Preemption “sounds new only because it’s old: It’s a nineteenth-century concept, rooted in concerns about security along the nation’s expanding borders” (p. 86), especially the problems posed by pirates, marauding Indians, foreign plotters, and the vulnerable “derelict” regimes (what today would be called “failed states”) in places like Florida, Texas, and California that gave them shelter. Modeled on Adams’s advice to President James Monroe to abjure Britain’s offer of collaboration and proclaim the Monroe Doctrine as a singularly American precept, Bush’s unilateralism in Iraq and elsewhere thus “reoects a return to an old position, not the emergence of a new one” (p. 26). As for hegemony, Gaddis claims that Adams, who meant for the United States to dominate the Western Hemisphere, would have found entirely congenial President Bush’s pronouncement at West Point in 2002 that “America has, and intends to keep, military strengths beyond challenge” (p. 30).
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