The document discusses several theories for why the US took action in Iraq after 9/11:
1) It was an elite decision driven by policy entrepreneurs like Cheney and Wolfowitz who had long advocated radical democratization in the Middle East and saw 9/11 as an opportunity.
2) American missionary zeal and the Bush administration's view of a battle of good vs. evil drove the desire to spread democracy.
3) Public support was rallied by appealing to nationalism after 9/11 and conservative values.
4) It was an attempt to reassert US dominance and counter perceptions of decline given its decreasing economic power and military overstretch. However, the US remains the dominant global power in absolute terms
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Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
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The document discusses several theories for why the US took action in Iraq after 9/11:
1) It was an elite decision driven by policy entrepreneurs like Cheney and Wolfowitz who had long advocated radical democratization in the Middle East and saw 9/11 as an opportunity.
2) American missionary zeal and the Bush administration's view of a battle of good vs. evil drove the desire to spread democracy.
3) Public support was rallied by appealing to nationalism after 9/11 and conservative values.
4) It was an attempt to reassert US dominance and counter perceptions of decline given its decreasing economic power and military overstretch. However, the US remains the dominant global power in absolute terms
The document discusses several theories for why the US took action in Iraq after 9/11:
1) It was an elite decision driven by policy entrepreneurs like Cheney and Wolfowitz who had long advocated radical democratization in the Middle East and saw 9/11 as an opportunity.
2) American missionary zeal and the Bush administration's view of a battle of good vs. evil drove the desire to spread democracy.
3) Public support was rallied by appealing to nationalism after 9/11 and conservative values.
4) It was an attempt to reassert US dominance and counter perceptions of decline given its decreasing economic power and military overstretch. However, the US remains the dominant global power in absolute terms
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
The document discusses several theories for why the US took action in Iraq after 9/11:
1) It was an elite decision driven by policy entrepreneurs like Cheney and Wolfowitz who had long advocated radical democratization in the Middle East and saw 9/11 as an opportunity.
2) American missionary zeal and the Bush administration's view of a battle of good vs. evil drove the desire to spread democracy.
3) Public support was rallied by appealing to nationalism after 9/11 and conservative values.
4) It was an attempt to reassert US dominance and counter perceptions of decline given its decreasing economic power and military overstretch. However, the US remains the dominant global power in absolute terms
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
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9/11 AND THE IRAQ WAR
1. Why did the US take action in Iraq?
2. Does this maneuver indicate that the US is in decline? 3. Was 9/11 an exceptional act, or part of a pattern? 4. Was the impulse for war a popular one (i.e. driven by public opinion) or was it a channel of action selected by government and business elites and the Washington community?
CASE SUMMARY BASED ON:
Rosati & Scott ch.2 Mazarr: ‘Iraq War and Agenda Setting’ Jervis: ‘The Remaking of a Unipolar World’ Hopkins: ‘Capitalism, Nationalism and the New American Empire’ Mastanduno: the US Political System and Intl Leadership
Agenda-setting approach (Iraq an elite decision):
THEORY (KINGDON, 1984; MAZARR):
“Policy communities” = such groups are belief and idea driven rather than interest driven, and share causal beliefs Policy Entrepreneurs: “willing to invest resources, time, and money in hope of future return” o Lay the groundwork for the ultimate acceptance of their idea o Later became key government officials – Wolfowitz; Cheney; etc. these men were committed to the “radical, prodemocracy reorientation of the Middle East” (Mazarr) o Institutionalized their influence and insinuated their views into policy as they moved into powerful government positions in the Bush administration Groupthink: there exists a desire for concurrence, and hence policy communities tend to develop a common causal story, which explains how the group comes to experience harm, who is to blame, and who must take responsibility o Rational decision making gives way to distorted decisions, as the group is highly cohesive, insulated, and informal in its analysis, i.e. in the Bush administration o Causal stories in Bush administration RE. Instability and risk in the Middle East Focusing Event/Policy Window: an event that is significant enough to both call for and justify a response o “Alternatives are advocated for a long time before a short-run opportunity presents itself on an agenda” o A focusing event joins three streams of policy: problem recognition, development of policy options, and political opportunity IRAQ: policy options had already been developed by individuals that, at the time of 9/11, held key govt. posts – 9/11 provided the casus belli. o There are no new policy ideas; existing ones merely cluster around policy windows.
Spread of ‘American Values’ (Morality) + Opportunism – Combination of crisis catalyst and
underlying long-term objectives deeply rooted in the American cultural psyche American missionary zeal (JERVIS) o A product of Bush himself “this is what I was put on this earth for” born again Christian, looking for missions, sees himself and his country in a struggle of good against evil o Also embedded in US political culture Reformist characteristics exemplified by bold initiatives (unifying Europe, modernizing the 3rd World) and dialectic rhetoric (good/evil, right/wrong) C.f. Reagan’s label of the USSR as an evil empire, and Bush’s “axis of evil” for Iran, Iraq and Nth Korea
Reasons for population support (HOPKINS):
Hopkins suggests that there is a divide within American government and society that exists between xenophobic groups that seek isolation, and groups that support globalizing forces o Within administration, these groups are called ‘”lions and foxes” (PARETO) Lions: conservatives, stand for tradition and support the use of force to maintain order Foxes: innovators, business-minded, persuasion and guile o Foxes had no interest in occupying Iraq, but they were co-opted by the lions in the administration, who succeeded in the aftermath of 9/11 in transforming domestic patriotism to aggressive nationalism The response to 9/11 was advocated by a “small group of neocons and nationalist activists,” who “sounded an alarm that rang throughout American society” o Appealed to the population to “rally round the flag,” to engage in a “crusade” against terrorism o Globalization had created a rapid increase in inequality between the top 1% and bottom 90% of income earners As lions were more nationalist and insular in their approach to FP, this process was mainly advocated by foxes o “Swirling uncertainties contributed to the rise of evangelical faiths… [which] promoted an assertive form of Christianity that fitted into secular patriotism and provided validation for it” Conservative values, stiffened by evangelical teaching, provided unambiguous and reassuring answers PARETO: emphasizes the power of sentiment rather than reason in influencing behavior The success of new American capitalism rested on promoting fox-like qualities of innovation, guile and persuasion that were needed to manage business relationships across countries o Economic advantage pointed towards globalization, but fear of foreign invaders, stirred up in the aftermath of 9/11, called for the rebuilding of fortress America
Insecurity approach – i.e. reassertion (possibly in decline)
ROSATI & SCOTT: as the world became more pluralistic and interdependent from the 1960s through to the 1980s, the US’s economic and military ability to influence the world declined relative to its post WWII apex o Economic role: Went from a creditor to a debtor nation in 1971 – since then annual trade deficits have been the norm (US DEPT OF COMMERCE) Percentage of total world economic production produced within the US declined from 50% to 24% b/w 1950 and 1976 (KRASNER, 1982) Petroleum-based economy grown increasingly dependent on foreign oil post 1950s, THUS VULNERABILITY 1920s – 90% world oil production in the US (HALBERSTAM, 1986); 1950s “oil production in the US had slowed while overall global demand had increased” In the 21st century, 70% of oil is imported (US CENSUS BUREAU DATA) o Military role: post-Vietnam – reduced ability to use force successfully Diminishment of the US’s power of persuasion less certainty of multilateral support; less certainty of victory – the US increasingly has to prove its strength o Imperial overstretch theories: widening gap between the ends and means of a great power i.e. America’s current involvement in Iraq, Afghanistan Responses: “balancing” and “delegitimization” attempts by other countries, in order to resist US actions and challenge US hegemony JERVIS: common sense and most academic thinking argue that a hegemon’s primary objective should be to maintain the prevailing international system. The irony is that Washington seeks to change the rules of the order. o The US behaves more like a revolutionary state than committed to preserving the existing arrangements o Terrorism seems so threatening because US hegemony and dramatic decline in international was that may be a product of it mean that many of the threats that had been so prominent previously have today disappeared Hence, psychologically, if not logically, small threats appear in the same class with fundamental challenges such as the Cold War Although the current world system is unipolar, the situation represents that of the CW The fact that the US is a hegemon feeds it revolutionary zeal Having established order within its large sphere, the hegemon will find itself threatened by whatever is out of its reach hegemony thus ironically magnifies the sense of threat. The very fact that the US has interests throughout the world leads to fears that undesired changes in one area could undermine its interests elsewhere Rejection of INTL law as it limits the changes that are likely to accompany shifting power relations, which goes against revolutionary interests
Economic/Imperial – i.e. consolidation (not in decline) – MASTANDUNO
In absolute terms, the US remains a dominant power o Economy largest in terms of GNP o With the collapse of the USSR, the US is unambiguously the world’s leading military power and is increasingly dominant in the production and export of sophisticated weaponry o Despite its relative decline, the US still retains sufficient power to seriously contemplate an international leadership role