War and Power

War and Power

Phillips Payson O'Brien

Phillips Payson O'Brien

A bold, revisionist study of modern warfare, showing that military victory is rooted not in large armies and decisive battles, but in the full spectrum of economic, political, and social power “Vital reading for anyone grappling with America’s uncertain place in today’s global order.” —Alexander Vindman, New York Times–bestselling author of The Folly of Realism For nearly two centuries, international relations have been premised on the idea of the “Great Powers.” As the thinking went, these mighty states—the European empires of the nineteenth century, the United States and the USSR during the Cold War—were uniquely able to exert their influence on the world stage because of their overwhelming military capabilities. But as military historian Phillips Payson O’Brien argues in War and Power, this conception of power fails to capture the more complicated truth about how...
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