Still the Realist Tradition: September 11 and the Bush Doctrine
Author: Yu-Shan Wu
Abstract / Chinese PDF Download
The September 11 incident has an enormous impact on international relations theories. Towards the end of the Cold War, neoliberalism had mounted attack on realism, the hitherto dominant paradigm in the field. With the end of the Cold War, constructivism joined the assault on realism. The September 11 incident apparently shows the validity of Samuel P. Huntington’s “clash of civilizations” theorem. Can realism survive this whole series of assault in the post-Cold War, post-September 11 world? This is the main concern of the article in which we explore the root of the September 11 attack, the impact on realism, and the way international system responds to the shock. We find the September 11 attack was motivated by Islamic anti-modernization radicalism, which testifies the validity of Huntington’s “clash of civilizations” paradigm. However, the response from the international system, whether the Bush Doctrine with its strategy, operation mode, and impact, or the response to the Bush Doctrine by the world countries, clearly follows realist postulates. Hence the validity of realism as an approach to international relations is vindicated by the September 11 incident and its impact.