ABSTRACT

There are important reasons for the distinct yet significant course adjustments in American and Western foreign policy, which is currently focused on the Middle Eastern and Chinese "hot spots." In early 2012, the United States "pivoted" to make the Far East its military and strategic first priority, thereby downgrading the Middle East. This change in priorities has been accompanied by a curtailed military budget and the end of the two-war doctrine.

Amitai Etzioni argues that pivoting towards the Far East is premature and flawed in principle. China can and should be treated for the near future as a potential partner in a changing global order, rather than contained and made into an enemy. At the same time, he argues, the true hot spots continue to be in the Middle East, albeit not in Iraq or Afghanistan, but in Iran and Pakistan. Less urgent but of great importance are the ways the West deals with a complex and varied Muslim world, with political Islamic parties and social movements, and with future waves of Arab awaking. Here the distinction between security and nation building becomes essential for both normative and strategic reasons.

Etzioni expects that we will see few armed humanitarian interventions of the kind we witnessed in 2011 in Libya. To this end, he examines policies that threaten and favor the promotion of human rights. This timely book is written with Etzioni's customary deep appreciation for important issues.

part I|60 pages

Hie China Hedge: First—A Partner?

chapter 1|23 pages

China: Making an Adversary*

chapter 2|20 pages

Is China a Responsible Stakeholder?*

chapter 3|16 pages

Who Is Violating the International Rules?

part II|32 pages

Can a Nuclear Iran Be Deterred and Contained?

part III|20 pages

Pakistan: The Hottest Spot

chapter 6|19 pages

Pakistan: A New, Geopolitical Approach*

part IV|56 pages

Muslims and Arabs: What Makes a Reliable Partner in Peace?

chapter 7|3 pages

Tunisia: The First Arab Islamocracy

chapter 8|22 pages

Illiberal Moderate Muslims Are the Global*

chapter 10|6 pages

The Salafi Question*

part V|28 pages

Nuclear Arms: Wrong Priorities

chapter 12|15 pages

Zero Is the Wrong Number

chapter 13|12 pages

A Deeply Flawed Fuel Bank*

part VI|34 pages

EU: How to Save the Union?

chapter 14|21 pages

Nationalism: The Communitarian Block*

chapter 15|12 pages

The Good Life in an Austere Age

part VII|32 pages

When Are Armed Humanitarian Interventions Justified?

chapter 16|17 pages

The Lessons of Libya

chapter 17|14 pages

The Case for Decoupled Armed Interventions*

part VIII|74 pages

Human Rights Post 2000

chapter 18|17 pages

Life: The Most Basic Right*

chapter 19|16 pages

Terrorists: Neither Soldiers nor Criminals

chapter 20|10 pages

Drones: Moral and Legal?

chapter 22|18 pages

Pirates: Too Many Rights?*