“The Pentagon’s New Map: War and Peace in the Twenty-First Century” is a 2004 book by Thomas P.M. Barnett, who, at the time, wrote for Esquire magazine. The book is based on an article he wrote for the magazine. The book outlines a new grand strategy for American foreign policy.
The book is not only based on an article in a magazine, but also an iteration of a PowerPoint presentation that Barnett had been making for years. Those slides were simply known as “The Brief.” Interested parties, at the time, included the public and private sectors, encompassing military organizations and foreign governments. Do you think “The Pentagon’s New Map” had an undue effect on American foreign policy during the beginning of the twenty-first century?
This was a highly influential book, briefing, and magazine article. There were six main, clear arguments made.
There were two versions of Barnett’s presentation on The Pentagon’s New Map that aired on C-SPAN by 2005. In December 2004, the network showed one of Barnett’s recent presentations, followed by a live call-in program, so Barnett could answer questions. Barnett was then asked by the United States Air Force to give the presentation to every new officer who was made a general. These points show how much effect this argument had.
Around that time, the Naval War College, where Barnett worked, gave him the choice of either writing the second book or keeping his job. The college was upset that such a political argument was made so publicly in ‘The Pentagon’s New Map’. He chose to write a new book. He wrote, ‘Blueprint for Action: A Future Worth Creating.’
It is difficult to overstate how important the argument of ‘The Pentagon’s New Map: War and Peace in the Twenty-First Century’ was at the time. The so-called Neo-Conservatives in the Defense Department bought the argument, hook, line, and sinker. The argument was used to justify an era of unprecedented American military intervention. The arguments herein essentially became the Grand Strategy of the United States.
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