Michael Wallack
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From compellence to pre-emption
Kosovo and Iraq as US responses to contested hegemony
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This chapter examines the US role in the Kosovo and Iraq wars in the context of evolving strategic and foreign policy doctrine. The conclusion reached is that the George W. Bush administration has made a significant change in US strategic and foreign policy doctrine exemplified by its use of force in Afghanistan, and particularly clearly in Iraq. The change is the move from a central doctrine of defence by deterrence, containment, stable alliances and alignments, to a policy of expansion of influence and consolidation in areas of contested hegemony by means of pre-emptive war and regime change. The first policy of the Bush administration was the so-called 'smart sanctions' initiative proposed at the UN in the first months of the administration. The grand strategy with which Bush entered office amounts, in post-9/11 practice, to a defensive unilateralism that is at the core of the announced policy of pre-emptive hegemonism.

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The Transatlantic Divide

Foreign and security policies in the Atlantic Alliance from Kosovo to Iraq

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