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Fighting Decline

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Fighting Decline

by Gwynne Dyer

McClelland & Stewart | September 3, 2013 | Trade Paperback

The third of Dyer's bestselling series on the new world order.

Gwynne Dyer's provocative argument in Fighting Decline is that, since 2001, American foreign and defence policies have been run by people whose entire approach is shaped by an idea of the United States now being the world's sole superpower. The invasion of Iraq, Dyer argues, was as much a warning shot across the bows of potential rivals as it was a mission to oust Saddam Hussein.

But while the United States has been pouring countless billions into its war on Iraq and its subsequent attempt to impose democracy on a deeply divided nation, two Asian countries have quietly been developing enormous economic power. India and China are now both on the brink of rivalling American economic clout and political influence. It remains to be seen just how the United States will respond to this competition, but history, as Dyer shows, provides us with vivid lessons of how empires act when in decline. No paramount power, however skilled, has yet succeeded in stopping the process by which new powers grow to overshadow them, but they do seem condemned to try. Fighting Decline brings insight, intelligence, and Dyer's trademark humour to bear on this, one of the biggest issues facing the world.

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From the Publisher

The third of Dyer's bestselling series on the new world order.

Gwynne Dyer's provocative argument in Fighting Decline is that, since 2001, American foreign and defence policies have been run by people whose entire approach is shaped by an idea of the United States now being the world's sole superpower. The invasion of Iraq, Dyer argues, was as much a warning shot across the bows of potential rivals as it was a mission to oust Saddam Hussein.

But while the United States has been pouring countless billions into its war on Iraq and its subsequent attempt to impose democracy on a deeply divided nation, two Asian countries have quietly been developing enormous economic power. India and China are now both on the brink of rivalling American economic clout and political influence. It remains to be seen just how the United States will respond to this competition, but history, as Dyer shows, provides us with vivid lessons of how empires act when in decline. No paramount power, however skilled, has yet succeeded in stopping the process by which new powers grow to overshadow them, but they do seem condemned to try. Fighting Decline brings insight, intelligence, and Dyer's trademark humour to bear on this, one of the biggest issues facing the world.

About the Author

Gwynne Dyer has worked as a freelance journalist, columnist, broadcaster, and lecturer on international affairs for more than twenty years. He served in three navies and held academic appointments at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst and Oxford University. Dyer is the author of War, which was reissued in 2004, and of Ignorant Armies (2003) and Future: Tense (2004). He writes a column on current events that is published in more than 175 newspapers worldwide. Dyer lives in London, England.

Trade Paperback

256 Pages, 6.35 x 8.75 x 0.68 in

September 3, 2013

McClelland & Stewart

English


0771029799
9780771029790

From the Critics

"[Dyer's] no-nonsense approach continues to combine humour, hard-hitting analysis, and provocative
challenges."
- Quill & Quire

"If you plan on reading only one book this year, make [Future: Tense] the one. In perfectly clear prose, with arguments as well-researched as they are compelling, this military expert explains why what we're doing is mad." - Metro Times (Detroit)

"A convincing explanation for [the war in] Iraq."
- Maclean's

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