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America as a Model for the World? A Foreign Policy Perspective

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 September 2013

Kenneth N. Waltz*
Affiliation:
University of California, Berkeley

Extract

I. How the Placement of States Affects Their Policies

Because throughout most of the years since the second World War the United States and the Soviet Union were similarly placed by their power, their external behaviors should have shown striking similarities. Did they? Yes, more than has usually been realized. The behavior of states can be compared on many counts. Their armament policies and their interventions abroad are two of the most revealing. On the former count, the United States in the early 1960s undertook the largest strategic and conventional peace-time military build-up the world has yet seen. We did so even as Khrushchev was trying at once to carry through a major reduction in the conventional forces and to follow a strategy of minimum deterrence, and we did so even though the balance of strategic weapons greatly favored the United States. As one should have expected, the Soviet Union soon followed in America's footsteps, thus restoring the symmetry of great-power behavior. And so it was through most of the years of the Cold War. Advances made by one were quickly followed by the other, with the United States almost always leading the way. Allowing for geographic differences, the overall similarity of their forces was apparent. The ground forces of the Soviet Union were stronger than those of the United States, but in naval forces the balance of advantage was reversed. The Soviet Union's largely coastal navy gradually became more of a blue-water fleet, but one of limited reach. Its navy never had more than half the tonnage of ours.

Type
In Focus: The 1991 Annual Meeting
Copyright
Copyright © The American Political Science Association 1991

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References

Notes

1. Laird, Melvin R., A House Divided: America's Strategy Gap (Chicago: Henery Regney, 1962), pp. 53, 78–79.Google Scholar

2. Blechman, Barry and Kaplan, Stephen S., Force without War: U.S. Armed Forces as a Political Instrument (Washington: Brookings Institution, 1978).Google Scholar

3. Butterfield, Herbert, “The Balance of Power,” in Butterfield, and Wight, Martin, eds., Diplomatic Investigations (London: George Allen & Unwin, 1966), p. 140.Google Scholar

4. “Excerpts from Remarks by Vice President George Bush,” Press Release, Austin, Texas, February 18, 1985.

5. Quoted in Tucker, Robert W., Intervention and the Reagan Doctrine, (New York: Council on Religion and International Affairs, 1985), p. 5.Google Scholar

6. In Layne, Christopher, “The Unipolar Illusion: American Foreign Policy in the Post Cold War World.” Presented to the Washington Strategy Seminar, April 25, 1991, p. 21.Google Scholar

7. Quotations are from ibid., pp. 21–22.

8. New York Times, “France to U.S.: Don't Rule,” September 3, 1991, p. A8 (no byline).