1st Edition

American Foreign Policy and Postwar Reconstruction Comparing Japan and Iraq

By Jeff Bridoux Copyright 2011
    256 Pages 6 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    252 Pages 6 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    On the eve of the invasion of Iraq, President G.W. Bush argued that if setting up democracy in Japan and Germany after WW II was successful, then it should also be successful in Iraq. This book provides a detailed comparison of the reconstruction of Japan from 1945 to 1952 with the current reconstruction of Iraq, evaluating the key factors affecting the success or failure of such projects.

    The book seeks to understand why American officials believed that extensive social reengineering aiming at seeding democracy and economic development is replicable, through identifying factors explaining the outcome of U.S.-led post-conflict reconstruction projects. The analysis reveals that in addition to the effective use of material resources of power, the outcome of reconstruction projects depends on a variety of other intertwined factors, and Bridoux provides a new analytical framework relying on a Gramscian concept of power to develop a greater understanding of these factors, and the ultimate success or failure of these reconstruction projects.

    Appraising the effectiveness of American power in the contemporary international structure, this work is a significant contribution to the field and will be of great interest to all scholars of foreign policy, international relations and conflict studies.

    1. American Power: The Tale of Force and Consent  2. Power and the American Experience  3. The Delicate Mix of Coercion and Consent: Assessing Truman’s and G.W. Bush Understanding of Power and Foreign Policy  4. American Power at Risk?: Reconstructing Iraq  5. Reconstructing Japan: Coercion, Consent and Consistency  6. Postwar Reconstruction and the American Experience

    Biography

    Jeff Bridoux is currently a postdoctoral fellow at Aberystwyth University. His research interests encompass the use of the concept of power in International Relations, especially regarding American Foreign Policy, international politics of the Middle East and East Asia, and postwar reconstruction.