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109 Pol. Sci. Q. 1 (1994-1995)

handle is hein.journals/pclscceqry109 and id is 1 raw text is: 







The Future of American Power


                                       AARON L. FRIEDBERG

            Over the course of the past half century the United States
has declined, but unlike its former Soviet rival it has not fallen. From
the point of view of the United States, the relevant questions now are,
first, how the end of the cold war will affect the subsequent trajectory
of its power and, second, how changes in American  power (and, more
broadly, in the distribution of power in the international system as a
whole) will affect the shape and stability of the post-cold war order.
In this article, I shall concentrate primarily on the first set of issues,
examining  in turn how  the events of the late 1980s and early 1990s
will combine  with longer-term trends to shape the further evolution
of American  economic,  military, structural, soft (cultural and ideo-
logical), and political power before turning briefly to a consideration
of the larger significance of these trends. Because so much is contin-
gent, both aspects of this discussion are necessarily speculative, with
the projections of the second portion building on  those of the first.
Although  there are a number  of contrary trends, I conclude that on
balance the end of the cold war will accelerate the relative decline in
American   national power. Changes  in the distribution of power will
lead to mounting   disputes over the legitimacy of existing rules and
institutions and as a result to a protracted period of  international
instability. This turmoil is likely to give rise to a set of separate, com-
peting subsystems,  not to a new, unified world order.


AARON  L. FRIEDBERG is associate professor of politics and international affairs at Princeton
University and Director of the Research Program in International Security at Princeton's Center of
International Studies.


Political Science Quarterly Volume 109 Number 1 1994


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