USA= A Less Super Superpower

**One of the most difficult things to judge in the world today is the extent of American power. On the one hand, there is no doubt that the United States possesses a far larger pile of weapons than any other country, that the American economy is also larger than any other country’s and that America’s movies and television programs are consumed globally. America is widely accorded the title “only superpower,” and many of its detractors as well as its supporters describe it as the world’s first truly globe-straddling empire. On the other hand, it is not yet clear what the United States can accomplish with these eye-catching assets. For power, as Thomas Hobbes wrote in one of the most succinct and durable definitions of power ever offered, is a “present means, to obtain some future apparent good.” Power, after all, is not just an expenditure of energy. There must be results.

Measured by Hobbes’s test, the superpower looks less super. Its military has been stretched to the breaking point by the occupation of a single weak country, Iraq. Its economy is held hostage by Himalayas of external debt, much of it in the hands of a strategic rival, China, holder of nearly $200 billion in Treasury bills. Its domestic debt, caused in part by the war expenditures, also towers to the skies. The United States has dramatically failed to make progress in its main declared foreign policy objective, the nonproliferation of weapons of mass destruction: While searching fruitlessly for nuclear programs in Iraq, where they did not exist, it temporized with North Korea, where they apparently do exist, and now it seems at a loss for a policy that will stop Iran from taking the same path.** The President has just announced that the “end of tyranny” is his goal, but in his first term the global democracy movement suffered its greatest setback since the cold war – Russia’s slide toward authoritarianism.

The shaky foundations of America’s power were on display in the President’s recent travels. Shortly before Bush landed in Brussels, Chancellor Gerhard Schrِder of Germany quietly but firmly repudiated the President’s militarized, US-centered approach to world affairs. NATO, he heretically announced, should no longer be “the primary venue” of the Atlantic relationship. Did that mean that Europe would continue to take direction from Washington through some other venue? Hardly: He was, he said, formulating German policy “in Europe, for Europe and from Europe.” The superpower’s penchant for military action was also rejected. The chancellor said, “Challenges lie today beyond the North Atlantic Alliance’s former zone of mutual assistance. And they do not primarily require military responses.”

Schrِder was standing on solid ground at home. A poll in the German newspaper Die Welt revealed that “Vladimir Putin is seen as more trustworthy than George W. Bush, France as a more important partner for German foreign and security policy than the United States. Closer harmonization of German foreign policy with America is not wanted, either.”

Meanwhile, offstage, in an apparent extension of constitution-building at home, Europe was taking the lead in building cooperative global instruments, including the Kyoto Protocol on global warming and the International Criminal Court. No sooner had the President arrived in Europe than an economic trapdoor seemed briefly to open beneath his feet when the South Korean Central Bank stated that it intended to move some of its holdings from the dollar to other currencies, causing a 174-point drop in the Dow Jones average. The next day, the bank disavowed its report and the dollar recovered, but not before the fragility of America’s economic position in the world had been revealed.

In history, the rise of imperial pretenders has usually led to military alliances against them. Such was the case, for instance, when a previous imperial republic, Napoleon’s France, conquered most of Europe but then was defeated by an oddly assorted alliance of Britain, Russia and Austria-Hungary. Such is not the case today. Europe seems determined to bypass rather than fight the American challenge. And power? The American kind is poor in “future goods.” There is rivalry in the air, but it no longer takes a martial form. Instead, Europe seems bent for now on building itself up economically and knitting itself together politically – readying, it appears, another kind of power, based more on cooperation, both within its own borders and with the world, and less on military force.
http://progressivetrail.org/articles/050303Schell.shtml

Well well well, what have we here a not so superpower whose military is involved in Iraq and parts of afghanistan are now stretched to breaking point what kind of superpower is that, we not talking about well equipped foes we talking about 3rd world nations with limited fire power and in the case of Iraq non existent WMDs!

The TV news interviewed some iraqi children and there quotes summed it up in a nutshell “USA is a Lion a paper lion which will burn very easy”.

Re: USA= A Less Super Superpower

Ok and?

Re: USA= A Less Super Superpower

Surely this means Khilafah Land isn’t too far away! :hehe:

One thing we know is that this paper tiger is tough enough to kick terrorist butt and keep keyboard jihadis busy trying to find fault with the greatest nation that ever was.

Re: USA= A Less Super Superpower

Semihole are you afraid of islam you should be and the khilafah which you go on about in all your posts will end your interests in the muslim nations for starters.

Re: USA= A Less Super Superpower

:rotfl:

Re: USA= A Less Super Superpower

2000 Billion for a 10 trillion economy..i think it is ok in trms of leverage. How come the chinese don’t hold Chinese t-bills :hehe:

Re: USA= A Less Super Superpower

hmmm if North Korea decides to rumble against South Korea what is the US gonna do send in the salvation army!

Re: USA= A Less Super Superpower

NO we will send in the chinese. THink of FDI and FII flows form the US into china. :wave:

Re: USA= A Less Super Superpower

My interpretation is that its Brown in the outside and all WHITE in the inside, afraid of what your friends would think if you told them you follow Islam!!!!!!!!!

Re: USA= A Less Super Superpower

AK we love you man but why do you hate us? Why so much anger my muslim brother. US is good country with good global intentions, dont resist us join us.

Re: USA= A Less Super Superpower

^ because he is upset at how a supposed perfect systm like Khilafah cannot be established and USA is thriving. Maybe God is wrong? Dunno...but it is eating him up...he is in turmoil...intervention is needed and we need to save him and convert him before he harms himself.

Re: USA= A Less Super Superpower

Come on AK at least give us a smile. Come on be a sport. Here let me extend a hand:hug:

Re: USA= A Less Super Superpower

I don't see the US dominating the world like it has in previous years. The situation in Iraq, North Korea and now with Iran exposes the weakness of America.

They cannot deal with all of these nations on thier own previously i would say they could easily deal with them because i had this idea that US was unbeatable and unstoppable i dont have this idea any longer.

I agree with article Iran now has upper hand over nuclear issue and North Korea is still in a stalemate even after all these years of threats and ultimatums.