{"id":234760,"date":"2017-08-14T23:12:23","date_gmt":"2017-08-15T03:12:23","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/uncategorized\/can-europe-be-saved-commentary-magazine.php"},"modified":"2017-08-14T23:12:23","modified_gmt":"2017-08-15T03:12:23","slug":"can-europe-be-saved-commentary-magazine","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/post-humanism\/can-europe-be-saved-commentary-magazine.php","title":{"rendered":"Can Europe Be Saved? &#8211; Commentary Magazine"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><p>    And yet realism is currently in crisis.  <\/p>\n<p>    Realism was once a sophisticated intellectual tradition that    represented the best in American statecraft. Eminent Cold War    realists were broadly supportive of Americas postwar    internationalism and its stabilizing role in global affairs,    even as they stressed the need for prudence and restraint in    employing U.S. power. Above all, Cold Warera realism was based    on a hard-earned understanding that Americans must deal with    the geopolitical realities as they are, rather than retreat to    the false comfort provided by the Atlantic and Pacific oceans.  <\/p>\n<p>    More recently, however, those who call themselves realists have    lost touch with this tradition. Within academia, realism has    become synonymous with a preference for radical retrenchment    and the deliberate destruction of arrangements that have    fostered international stability and prosperity for decades.    Within government, the Trump administration appears to be    embracing an equally misguided version of realisman approach    that masquerades as shrewd realpolitik but is likely to prove    profoundly damaging to American power and influence. Neither of    these approaches is truly realist, as neither promotes core    American interests or deals with the world as it really is. The    United States surely needs the insights that an authentically    realist approach to global affairs can provide. But first,    American realism will have to undergo a reformation.  <\/p>\n<p>    Realism has taken many forms over the years, but it has always    been focused on the imperatives of power, order, and survival    in an anarchic global arena. The classical realistsThucydides,    Machiavelli, Hobbesconsidered how states and leaders should    behave in a dangerous world in which there was no overarching    morality or governing authority strong enough to regulate state    behavior. The great modern realiststhinkers and statesmen such    as Reinhold Niebuhr, Hans Morgenthau, George Kennan, and Henry    Kissingergrappled with the same issues during and after the    catastrophic upheaval that characterized the first half of the    20th century.  <\/p>\n<p>    They argued that it was impossible to transcend the tragic    nature of international politics through good intentions or    moralistic maxims, and that seeking to do so would merely    empower the most ruthless members of the international system.    They contended, on the basis of bitter experience, that    aggression and violence were always a possibility in    international affairs, and that states that desired peace would    thus have to prepare for war and show themselves ready to wield    coercive power. Most important, realist thinkers tended to    place a high value on policies and arrangements that restrained    potential aggressors and created a basis for stability within    an inherently competitive global environment.  <\/p>\n<p>    For this very reason, leading Cold Warera realists advocated a    robust American internationalism as the best way of restraining    malevolent actors and preventing another disastrous global    crack-upone that would inevitably reach out and touch the    United States, just as the world wars had. Realist thinkers    understood that America was uniquely capable of stabilizing the    international order and containing Soviet power after World War    II, even as they disagreedsometimes sharplyover the precise    nature and extent of American commitments. Moreover, although    Cold War realists recognized the paramount role of power in    international affairs, most also recognized that U.S. power    would be most effective if harnessed to a compelling concept of    American moral purpose and exercised primarily through enduring    partnerships with nations that shared core American values. An    idealistic policy undisciplined by political realism is bound    to be unstable and ineffective, the political scientist Robert    Osgood wrote. Political realism unguided by moral purpose will    be self-defeating and futile. Most realists were thus    sympathetic to the major initiatives of postwar foreign policy,    such as the creation of U.S.-led military alliances and the    cultivation of a thriving Western community composed primarily    of liberal democracies.  <\/p>\n<p>    At the same time, Cold War realists spoke of the need for    American restraint. They worried that Americas liberal    idealism, absent a sense of limits, would carry the country    into quixotic crusades. They thought that excessive commitments    at the periphery of the global system could weaken the    international order against its radical challengers. They    believed that a policy of outright confrontation toward the    Kremlin could be quite dangerous. Absolute security for one    power means absolute insecurity for all others, Kissinger    wrote. Realists therefore advocated policies meant to temper    American ambition and the most perilous aspects of superpower    competition. They supportedand, in Kissingers case,    ledarms-control agreements and political negotiations with    Moscow. They often objected to Americas costliest    interventions in the Third World. Kennan and Morgenthau were    among the first mainstream figures to go public with opposition    to American involvement in Vietnam (Morgenthau did so in the    pages of Commentary in May 1962).  <\/p>\n<p>    During the Cold War, then, realism was a supple, nuanced    doctrine. It emphasized the need for balance in American    statecraftfor energetic action blended with moderation, for    hard-headed power politics linked to a regard for partnerships    and values. It recognized that the United States could best    mitigate the tragic nature of international relations by    engaging with, rather than withdrawing from, an imperfect    world.  <\/p>\n<p>    This nuance has now been lost. Academics have applied the label    of realism to dangerous and unrealistic policy proposals. More    disturbing and consequential still, the distortion of realism    seems to be finding a sympathetic hearing in the Trump White    House.  <\/p>\n<p>    Consider the state of academic realism. Todays most prominent    self-identified realistsStephen Walt, John Mearsheimer, Barry    Posen, and Christopher Layneadvocate a thoroughgoing U.S.    retrenchment from global affairs. Whereas Cold War realists    were willing to see the world as it wasa world that required    unequal burden-sharing and an unprecedented, sustained American    commitment to preserve international stabilityacademic    realists now engage in precisely the wishful thinking that    earlier realists deplored. They assume that the international    order can essentially regulate itself and that America will not    be threatened byand can even profit froma more unsettled    world. They thus favor discarding the policies that have proven    so successful over the decades in providing a congenial    international climate.  <\/p>\n<p>    Why has academic realism gone astray? If the Cold War brokered    the marriage between realists and American global engagement,    the end of the Cold War precipitated a divorce. Following the    fall of the Soviet Union, U.S. policymakers continued to pursue    an ambitious global agenda based on preserving and deepening    both Americas geopolitical advantage and the liberal    international order. For many realists, however, the end of the    Cold War removed the extraordinary threatan expansionist    USSRthat had led them to support such an agenda in the first    place. Academic realists argued that the humanitarian    interventions of the 1990s (primarily in the former Yugoslavia)    reflected capriciousness rather than a prudent effort to deal    with sources of instability. Similarly, they saw key policy    initiativesespecially NATO enlargement and the Iraq war of    2003as evidence that Washington was no longer behaving with    moderation and was itself becoming a destabilizing force in    global affairs.  <\/p>\n<p>    These critiques were overstated, but not wholly without merit.    The invasion and occupation of Iraq did prove far costlier than    expected, as the academic realists had indeed warned. NATO    expansioneven as it successfully promoted stability and    liberal reform in Eastern Europedid take a toll on U.S.Russia    relations. Having lost policy arguments that they thought they    should have won, academic realists decided to throw the baby    out with the bathwater, calling for a radical reformulation of    Americas broader grand strategy.  <\/p>\n<p>    The realists preferred strategy has various namesoffshore    balancing, restraint, etc.but the key components and    expectations are consistent. Most academic realists argue that    the United States should pare back or eliminate its military    alliances and overseas troop deployments, going back onshore    only if a hostile power is poised to dominate a key overseas    region. They call on Washington to forgo costly nation-building    and counterinsurgency missions overseas and to downgrade if not    abandon the promotion of democracy and human rights.  <\/p>\n<p>    Academic realists argue that this approach will force local    actors in Europe, the Middle East, and East Asia to assume    greater responsibility for their own security, and that the    United States can manipulatethrough diplomacy, arms sales, and    covert actionthe resulting rivalries and conflicts to prevent    any single power from dominating a key region and thereby    threatening the United States. Should these calculations prove    faulty and a hostile power be poised to dominate, Washington    can easily swoop in to set things aright, as it did during the    world wars. Finally, if even this calculation were to    prove faulty, realists argue that America can ride out the    danger posed by a regional hegemon because the Atlantic and    Pacific Oceans and Americas nuclear deterrent provide    geopolitical immunity against existential threats.  <\/p>\n<p>    Todays academic realists portray this approach as hard-headed,    economical strategy. But in reality, it represents a stark    departure from classical American realism. During the Cold War,    leading realists placed importance on preserving international    stability and heeded the fundamental lesson of World Wars I and    IIthat the United States, by dint of its power and geography,    was the only actor that could anchor international    arrangements. Todays academic realists essentially argue that    the United States should dismantle the global architecture that    has undergirded the international orderand that Washington can    survive and even thrive amid the ensuing disorder. Cold War    realists helped erect the pillars of a peaceful and prosperous    world. Contemporary academic realists advocate tearing down    those pillars and seeing what happens.  <\/p>\n<p>    The answer is nothing good. Contemporary academic realists    sit atop a pyramid of faulty assumptions. They assume that one    can remove the buttresses of the international system without    that system collapsing, and that geopolitical burdens laid down    by America will be picked up effectively by others. They assume    that the United States does not need the enduring relationships    that its alliances have fostered, and that it can obtain any    cooperation it needs via purely transactional interactions.    They assume that a world in which the United States ceases to    promote liberal values will not be a world less congenial to    Americas geopolitical interests. They assume that revisionist    states will be mollified rather than emboldened by an American    withdrawal, and that the transition from U.S. leadership to    another global system will not unleash widespread conflict.    Finally, they assume that if such upheaval does erupt, the    United States can deftly manage and even profit from it, and    that America can quickly move to restore stability at a    reasonable cost should it become necessary to do so.  <\/p>\n<p>    The founding generation of American realists had learned not to    indulge in wishfully thinking that the international order    would create or sustain itself, or that the costs of responding    to rampant international disorder would be trivial. Todays    academic realists, by contrast, would stake everything on a    leap into the unknown.  <\/p>\n<p>    For many years, neither Democratic nor Republican policymakers    were willing to make such a leap. Now, however, the Trump    administration appears inclined to embrace its own version of    foreign-policy realism, one that bears many similarities toand    contains many of the same liabilities asthe academic variant.    One of the least academic presidents in American history may,    ironically, be buying into some of the most misguided doctrines    of the ivory tower.  <\/p>\n<p>    Any assessment of the Trump administration must remain somewhat    provisional, given that Donald Trumps approach to foreign    policy is still a work in progress. Yet Trump and his    administration have so far taken multiple steps to outline a    three-legged-stool vision of foreign policy that they    explicitly describe as realist in orientation. Like    modern-day academic realism, however, this vision diverges    drastically from the earlier tradition of American realism and    leads to deeply problematic policy.  <\/p>\n<p>    The first leg is President Trumps oft-stated view of the    international environment as an inherently zero-sum arena in    which the gains of other countries are Americas losses. The    postWorld War II realists, by contrast, believed that the    United States could enjoy positive-sum relations with    like-minded nations. Indeed, they believed that America could    not enjoy economic prosperity and national security unless its    major trading partners in Europe and Asia were themselves    prosperous and stable. The celebrated Marshall Plan was    high-mindedly generous in the sense of addressing urgent    humanitarian needs in Europe, yet policymakers very much    conceived of it as serving Americas parochial economic and    security interests at the same time. President Trump, however,    sees a winner and loser in every transaction, and believeswith    respect to allies and adversaries alikethat it is the United    States who generally gets snookered. The reality at the core    of Trumps realism is his stated belief that America is    exploited by every nation in the world virtually.  <\/p>\n<p>    This belief aligns closely with the second leg of the Trump    worldview: the idea that all foreign policy is explicitly    competitive in nature. Whereas the Cold War realists saw a    Western community of states, President Trump apparently sees a    dog-eat-dog world where America should view every    transactioneven with allieson a one-off basis. The world is    not a global community but an arena where nations,    nongovernmental actors and businesses engage and compete for    advantage, wrote National Security Adviser H.R. McMaster and    National Economic Council Director Gary Cohn in an op-ed.    Rather than deny this elemental nature of international    affairs, we embrace it.  <\/p>\n<p>    To be sure, Cold War realists were deeply skeptical about one    worldism and appeals to a global community. But still they saw    the United States and its allies as representing the free    world, a community of common purpose forged in the battle    against totalitarian enemies. The Trump administration seems to    view U.S. partnerships primarily on an ad hoc basis, and it has    articulated something akin to a what have you done for me    lately approach to allies. The Cold War realistswho    understood how hard it was to assemble effective alliances in    the first placewould have found this approach odd in the    extreme.  <\/p>\n<p>    Finally, there is the third leg of Trumps realism: an    embrace of amorality. President Trump has repeatedly argued    that issues such as the promotion of human rights and democracy    are merely distractions from winning in the international    arena and a recipe for squandering scarce resources. On the    presidents first overseas trip to the Middle East in May, for    instance, he promised not to lecture authoritarian countries    on their internal behavior, and he made clear his intent to    embrace leaders who back short-term U.S. foreign-policy goals    no matter how egregious their violations of basic human rights    and political freedoms. Weeks later, on a visit to Poland, the    president did speak explicitly about the role that shared    values played in the Wests struggle against Communism during    the Cold War, and he invoked the hope of every soul to live in    freedom. Yet his speech contained only the most cursory    reference to Russiathe authoritarian power now undermining    democratic governance and security throughout Europe and    beyond. Just as significant, Trump failed to mention that    Poland itselfuntil a few years ago, a stirring exemplar of    successful transition from totalitarianism to democracyis    today sliding backwards toward illiberalism (as are other    countries within Europe and the broader free world).  <\/p>\n<p>    At first glance, this approach might seem like a modern-day    echo of Cold War debates about whether to back authoritarian    dictators in the struggle against global Communism. But, as    Jeane Kirkpatrick explained in her famous 1979 Commentary essay    Dictatorships and Double Standards, and as Kissinger himself    frequently argued, Cold War realists saw such tactical    alliances of convenience as being in the service of a deeper    values-based goal: the preservation of an international    environment favoring liberty and democracy against the    predations of totalitarianism. Moreover, they understood that    Americans would sustain the burdens of global leadership over a    prolonged period only if motivated by appeals to their    cherished ideals as well as their concrete interests. Trump,    for his part, has given only faint and sporadic indications of    any appreciation of the traditional role of values in American    foreign policy.  <\/p>\n<p>    Put together, these three elements have profound, sometimes    radical, implications for Americas approach to a broad range    of global issues. Guided by this form of realism, the Trump    administration has persistently chastised and alienated    long-standing democratic allies in Europe and the Asia-Pacific    and moved closer to authoritarians in Saudi Arabia, China, and    the Philippines. The presidents body language alone has been    striking: Trumps summits have repeatedly showcased    conviviality with dictators and quasi-authoritarians and    painfully awkward interactions with democratic leaders such as    Germanys Angela Merkel. Similarly, Trump has disdained    international agreements and institutions that do not deliver    immediate, concrete benefits for the United States, even if    they are critical to forging international cooperation on key    issues or advancing longer-term goods. As Trump has put it, he    means to promote the interests of Pittsburgh, not Paris, and he    believes that those interests are inherently at odds with each    other.  <\/p>\n<p>    To be fair, President Trump and his proxies do view the war on    terror as a matter of defending both American security    interests and Western civilizations values against the    jihadist onslaught. This was a key theme of Trumps major    address in Warsaw. Yet the administration has not explained how    this civilizational mindset would inform any other aspect of    its foreign policywith the possible exception of immigration    policyand resorts far more often to the parochial lens of    nationalism.  <\/p>\n<p>    The Trump administration seems to be articulating a vision in    which America has no lasting friends, little enduring concern    with values, and even less interest in cultivating a community    of like-minded nations that exists for more than purely    deal-making purposes. The administration has often portrayed    this as clear-eyed realism, even invoking the founding father    of realism, Thucydides, as its intellectual lodestar. This    approach does bear some resemblance to classical realism: an    unsentimental approach to the world with an emphasis on the    competitive aspects of the international environment. And    insofar as Trump dresses down American allies, rejects the    importance of values, and focuses on transactional    partnerships, his version of realism has quite a lot in common    with the contemporary academic version.  <\/p>\n<p>    Daniel Drezner of Tufts University has noted the overlap,    declaring in a Washington Post column, This is    [academic] realisms moment in the foreign policy sun. Randall    Schweller of Ohio State University, an avowed academic realist    and Trump supporter, has been even more explicit, noting    approvingly that Trumps foreign-policy approach essentially    falls under the rubric of off-shore balancing as promoted by    ivory-tower realists in recent decades.  <\/p>\n<p>    Yet one suspects that the American realists who helped create    the postWorld War II order would not feel comfortable with    either the academic or Trumpian versions of realism as they    exist today. For although both of these approaches purport to    be about power and concrete results, both neglect the very    things that have allowed the United States to use its power so    effectively in the past.  <\/p>\n<p>    Both the academic and Trump versions of realism ignore the fact    that U.S. power is most potent when it is wielded in concert    with a deeply institutionalized community of like-minded    nations. Alliances are less about addition and subtractionthe    math of the burden-sharing emphasized by Trump and the academic    realistsand more about multiplication, leveraging U.S. power    to influence world events at a fraction of the cost of    unilateral approaches. The United States would be vastly less    powerful and influential in Europe and Central Asia without    NATO; it would encounter far greater difficulties in rounding    up partners to wage the ongoing war in Afghanistan or defeat    the Islamic State; it would find itself fighting alonerather    than with some of the worlds most powerful partnersfar more    often. Likewise, without its longstanding treaty allies in    Asia, the United States would be at an almost insurmountable    disadvantage vis--vis revisionist powers in that region,    namely China.  <\/p>\n<p>    Both versions of realism also ignore the fact that America has    been able to exercise its enormous power with remarkably little    global resistance precisely because American leaders, by and    large, have paid sufficient regard to the opinions of potential    partners. Of course, every administration has sought to put    America first, but the pursuit of American self-interest has    proved most successful when it enjoys the acquiescence of other    states. Likewise, the academic and Trump versions of realism    too frequently forget that America draws power by supporting    values with universal appeal. This is why every American    president from Franklin Roosevelt to Barack Obama has    recognized that a more democratic world is likely to be one    that is both ideologically and geopolitically more congenial to    the United States.  <\/p>\n<p>    Most important, both the academic and Trump versions of realism    ignore the fact that the classical postWorld War II realists    deliberately sought to overcome the dog-eat-dog world that    modern variants take as a given. They did so by facilitating    cooperation within the free world, suppressing the security    competitions that had previously led to cataclysmic wars,    creating the basis for a thriving international economy, and    thereby making life a little less nasty, brutish, and short for    Americans as well as for vast swaths of the worlds population.  <\/p>\n<p>    If realism is about maximizing power, effectiveness, and    security in a competitive global arena, then neither the    academic nor the Trump versions of realism merits the name. And    if realism is meant to reflect the world as it is, both of    these versions are deeply deficient.  <\/p>\n<p>    This is a tragedy. For if ever there were a moment for an    informed realism, it would be now, as the strategic horizon    darkens and a more competitive international environment    reemerges. There is still time for Trump and his team to adapt,    and realism can still make a constructive contribution to    American policy. But first it must rediscover its rootsand    absorb the lessons of the past 70 years.  <\/p>\n<p>    A reformed realism should be built upon seven bedrock insights,    which President Trump would do well to embrace.  <\/p>\n<p>    First, American leadership remains essential to    restraining global disorder. Todays realists channel the    longstanding American hope that there would come a time when    the United States could slough off the responsibilities it    assumed after World War II and again become a country that    relies on its advantageous geography to keep the world at arms    length. Yet realism compels an awareness that America is    exceptionally suited to the part it has played for nearly four    generations. The combination of its power, geographic location,    and values has rendered America uniquely capable of providing a    degree of global order in a way that is more reassuring than    threatening to most of the key actors in the international    system. Moreover, given that today the most ambitious and    energetic international actors besides the United States are    not liberal democracies but aggressive authoritarian powers, an    American withdrawal is unlikely to produce multipolar peace.    Instead, it is likely to precipitate the upheaval that U.S.    engagement and activism have long been meant to avert. As a    corollary, realists must also recognize that the United States    is unlikely to thrive amid such upheaval; it will probably find    that the disorder spreads and ultimately implicates vital    American interests, as was twice the case in the first half of    the 20th century.  <\/p>\n<p>    Second, true realism recognizes the interdependence of hard    and soft power. In a competitive world, there is no    substitute for American hard power, and particularly for    military muscle. Without guns, there will notover the long    termbe butter. But military power, by itself, is an    insufficient foundation for American strategy. A crude reliance    on coercion will damage American prestige and credibility in    the end; hard power works best when deployed in the service of    ideas and goals that command widespread international approval.    Similarly, military might is most effective when combined with    the softer tools of development assistance, foreign aid, and    knowledge of foreign societies and cultures. The Trump    administration has sought to eviscerate these nonmilitary    capabilities and bragged about its hard-power budget; it    would do better to understand that a balance between hard and    soft power is essential.  <\/p>\n<p>    Third, values are an essential part of American realism.    Of course, the United States must not undertake indiscriminate    interventions in the name of democracy and human rights. But,    fortunately, no serious policymakernot Woodrow Wilson, not    Jimmy Carter, not George W. Bushhas ever embraced such a    doctrine. What most American leaders have traditionally    recognized is that, on balance, U.S. interests will be served    and U.S. power will be magnified in a world in which democracy    and human rights are respected. Ronald Reagan, now revered for    his achievements in improving Americas global position,    understood this point and made the selective promotion of    democracyprimarily through nonmilitary meansa key part of his    foreign policy. While paying due heed to the requirements of    prudence and the limits of American power, then, American    realists should work to foster a climate in which those values    can flourish.  <\/p>\n<p>    Fourth, a reformed realism requires aligning relations with    the major powers appropriatelyespecially today, as    great-power tensions rise. That means appreciating the value of    institutions that have bound the United States to some of the    most powerful actors in the international system for decades    and thereby given Washington leadership of the worlds dominant    geopolitical coalition. It means not taking trustworthy allies    for granted or picking fights with them gratuitously. It also    means not treating actual adversaries, such as Vladimir    Putins Russia, as if they were trustworthy partners (as Trump    has often talked of doing) or as if their aggressive behavior    were simply a defensive response to American provocations (as    many academic realists have done). A realistic approach to    American foreign policy begins by seeing great-power relations    through clear eyes.  <\/p>\n<p>    Fifth, limits are essential. Academic realists are wrong    to suggest that values should be excised from U.S. policy; they    are wrong to argue that the United States should pull back    dramatically from the world. Yet they are right that good    statecraft requires an understanding of limitsparticularly for    a country as powerful as the United States, and particularly at    a time when the international environment is becoming more    contested. The United States cannot right every wrong, fix    every problem, or defend every global interest. America can and    should, however, shoulder more of the burden than modern    academic and Trumpian realists believe. The United States will    be effective only if it chooses its battles carefully; it will    need to preserve its power for dealing with the most pressing    threat to its national interests and the international    orderthe resurgence of authoritarian challengeseven if that    means taking an economy-of-force approach to other issues.  <\/p>\n<p>    Sixth, realists must recognize that the United States has    not created and sustained a global network of alliances,    international institutions, and other embedded relationships    out of a sense of charity. It has done so because those    relationships provide forums through which the United States    can exercise power at a bargain-basement price. Embedded    relationships have allowed the United States to rally other    nations to support American causes from the Korean War to the    counter-ISIS campaign, and have reduced the transaction costs    of collective action to meet common threats from international    terrorism to p.iracy. They have provided institutional    megaphones through which the United States can amplify its    diplomatic voice and project its influence into key issues and    regions around the globe. If these arrangements did not exist,    the United States would find itself having to create them, or    acting unilaterally at far greater cost. If realism is really    about maximizing American power, true realists ought to be    enthusiastic about relationships and institutions that serve    that purpose. Realists should adopt the approach that every    postCold War president has embraced: that the United States    will act unilaterally in defense of its interests when it must,    but multilaterally with partners whenever it can.  <\/p>\n<p>    Finally, realism requires not throwing away what has worked    in the past. One of the most astounding aspects of both    contemporary academic realism and the Trumpian variant of that    tradition is the cavalier attitude they display toward    arrangements and partnerships that have helped produce a    veritable golden age of international peace, stability, and    liberalism since World War II, and that have made the United    States the most influential and effective actor in the globe in    the process. Of course, there have been serious and costly    conflicts over the past decades, and U.S. policy has always    been thoroughly imperfect. But the last 70 years have been    remarkably good ones for U.S. interests and the global    orderwhether one compares them with the 70 years before the    United States adopted its global leadership role, or compares    them with the violent disorder that would have emerged if    America followed the nostrums peddled today under the realist    label. A doctrine that stresses that importance of prudence and    discretion, and that was originally conservative in its    preoccupation with stability and order, ought not to pursue    radical changes in American statecraft or embrace a come what    may approach to the world. Rather, such a doctrine ought to    recognize that true achievements are enormously difficult to    come byand that the most realistic approach to American    strategy would thus be to focus on keeping a good thing going.  <\/p>\n<p><!-- Auto Generated --><\/p>\n<p>Excerpt from:<\/p>\n<p><a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\" href=\"https:\/\/www.commentarymagazine.com\/articles\/can-europe-saved\/\" title=\"Can Europe Be Saved? - Commentary Magazine\">Can Europe Be Saved? - Commentary Magazine<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> And yet realism is currently in crisis. Realism was once a sophisticated intellectual tradition that represented the best in American statecraft. Eminent Cold War realists were broadly supportive of Americas postwar internationalism and its stabilizing role in global affairs, even as they stressed the need for prudence and restraint in employing U.S <a href=\"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/post-humanism\/can-europe-be-saved-commentary-magazine.php\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"limit_modified_date":"","last_modified_date":"","_lmt_disableupdate":"","_lmt_disable":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[388394],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-234760","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-post-humanism"],"modified_by":null,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/234760"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=234760"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/234760\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=234760"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=234760"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=234760"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}