eScholarship Repository eScholarship Repository California Digital Library
eScholarship > IES > Paper 060408

IES Papers

IES Website

Policies

Search IES

Submit a Paper

Notify me of new papers

institute_logo

UCIAS
Institute of European Studies
University of California, Berkeley

IES Papers  •  IES Website  •  Policies  •  Search IES  •  Submit a Paper

The Rise and Fall of the Bush Doctrine: the Impact on Transatlantic Relations
Justin Vaisse (Vaïsse), French Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Institut d'Etudes Politiques de Paris

Download the Paper (97 K, PDF file) - April 6, 2006 Tell a colleague about it.
Printing Tips: Select 'print as image' in the Acrobat print dialog if you have trouble printing.

ABSTRACT:
Between 2002 and 2005, a relatively coherent and profoundly renewed strategic approach to international relations was developed by the Bush administration. Premised on an optimistic assessment of great power relations ("a balance of power that favors freedom"), it emphasized the importance of promoting democracy as a way to solve many of the long-term political and security problems of the greater Middle East. It rested on the view that American military power and assertive diplomacy should be used to defeat tyrannies, challenge a pernicious status quo and coerce states into abandoning weapons of mass destruction and support for terrorism - without worrying too much about legitimacy or formal multilateralism. The Bush doctrine led to tensions with the Europeans, who for the most part shared neither the world view that underpinned it nor its optimism about possible results, especially as far as geopolitical stability, terrorism and weapons of mass destruction were concerned. Then, in 2005, two silent developments took place: the Bush administration, while insisting on staying the course rhetorically (through "transformational diplomacy"), reverted to classical realism in its actual diplomacy - largely for reasons of expediency. China and India, on the other hand, imposed themselves on the global agenda, bringing multipolarity back into the picture of the world to come. While generally closer to European views, the new American realist line remains distinct from the European insistence on strengthening the rules and institutions of global governance.

SUGGESTED CITATION:
Justin Vaisse (Vaïsse), "The Rise and Fall of the Bush Doctrine: the Impact on Transatlantic Relations" (April 6, 2006). Institute of European Studies. Paper 060408.
http://repositories.cdlib.org/ies/060408

 
bar
Open Archives Initiative eScholarship is a service of the California Digital Library bepress