The Great Experiment: The Story of Ancient Empires, Modern States, and the Quest for a Global Nation

The Great Experiment: The Story of Ancient Empires, Modern States, and the Quest for a Global Nation

by Strobe Talbott
The Great Experiment: The Story of Ancient Empires, Modern States, and the Quest for a Global Nation

The Great Experiment: The Story of Ancient Empires, Modern States, and the Quest for a Global Nation

by Strobe Talbott

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Overview

This dramatic narrative of breathtaking scope and riveting focus puts the "story" back into history. It is the saga of how the most ambitious of big ideas -- that a world made up of many nations can govern itself peacefully -- has played out over the millennia. Humankind's "Great Experiment" goes back to the most ancient of days -- literally to the Garden of Eden -- and into the present, with an eye to the future.

Strobe Talbott looks back to the consolidation of tribes into nations -- starting with Israel -- and the absorption of those nations into the empires of Hammurabi, the Pharaohs, Alexander, the Caesars, Charlemagne, Genghis Khan, the Ottomans, and the Hapsburgs, through incessant wars of territory and religion, to modern alliances and the global conflagrations of the twentieth century.

He traces the breakthroughs and breakdowns of peace along the way: the Pax Romana, the Treaty of Westphalia, the Concert of Europe, the false start of the League of Nations, the creation of the flawed but indispensable United Nations, the effort to build a "new world order" after the cold war, and America's unique role in modern history as "the master builder" of the international system.

Offering an insider's view of how the world is governed today, Talbott interweaves through this epic tale personal insights and experiences and takes us with him behind the scenes and into the presence of world leaders as they square off or cut deals with each other. As an acclaimed journalist, he covered the standoff between the superpowers for more than two decades; as a high-level diplomat, he was in the thick of tumultuous events in the 1990s, when the bipolar equilibrium gave way to chaos in the Balkans, the emergence of a new breed of international terrorist, and America's assertiveness during its "unipolar moment" -- which he sees as the latest, but not the last, stage in the Great Experiment.

Talbott concludes with a trenchant critique of the worldview and policies of George W. Bush, whose presidency he calls a "consequential aberration" in the history of American foreign policy. Then, looking beyond the morass in Iraq and the battle for the White House, he argues that the United States can regain the trust of the world by leading the effort to avert the perils of climate change and nuclear catastrophe.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781416553496
Publisher: Simon & Schuster
Publication date: 01/01/2008
Sold by: SIMON & SCHUSTER
Format: eBook
Pages: 496
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Strobe Talbott is president of the Brookings Institution. He was founding director of the Yale Center for the Study of Globalization and Deputy Secretary of State from 1994 to 2001. He was Washington bureau chief and foreign policy columnist for Time, and a regular panelist on Inside Washington. He has written for The New York Times, the Financial Times, Washington PostForeign Affairs, Foreign Policy, The New Yorker.

Table of Contents

Introduction: A Gathering of Tribes 1

1 The Imperial Millennia

1 Caravans at Rest 15

2 A Light Unto the Nations 26

3 The Ecumenical State 41

4 The Poet and "The Prince" 66

5 Perpetual War and "Perpetual Peace" 86

6 Blood and Leather 104

2 The American Centuries

7 Monsters to Destroy 125

8 Empty Chairs 148

9 The Master Builder 174

10 A Trusteeship of the Powerful 203

11 An End and a Beginning 237

3 The Unipolar Decades

12 The New World Order 255

13 Seizing the Day 280

14 Hard Power 299

15 A Theory of the Case 324

16 Going it Alone 347

17 A Consequential Aberration 370

Conclusion: Yes, We Must 393

Acknowledgments 411

Illustration Credits 414

Notes 415

Index 463

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