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Security Is Relative Security Is Relative
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Power and Danger Power and Danger
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Cold War Nostalgia Cold War Nostalgia
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Understanding the Nature of Threat Understanding the Nature of Threat
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Experts, Neocons, and Expert Neocons Experts, Neocons, and Expert Neocons
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Notes Notes
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29 Threats and Dangers in the Twenty-First Century
Get accessChristopher J. Fettweis is Associate Professor of Political Science at Tulane University where he teaches courses on U.S. foreign policy, international relations, and national security. His most recent books are Pathologies of Power: Fear, Honor, Glory, and Hubris in US Foreign Policy and Making Foreign Policy Decisions. He received his PhD from the University of Maryland.
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Published:06 December 2017
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Abstract
Security is relative. No state is ever fully safe, just as no individual is ever completely free from danger. However, when U.S. security is considered next to that of any other state, it is hard to reach the conclusion that Washington faces much serious danger. The United States is simultaneously the safest and most fearful of all the great powers of the twenty-first century. This chapter discusses some of the structural and psychological factors that led to the overestimation of danger so common among U.S. analysts and policymakers. Why is it that many serious observers continue to believe that the current era is so dangerous, and even look to the past with a sense of nostalgia? Why do we fear so much?
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