The ‘Bush Doctrine’ as a hegemonic discourse strategy

Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 12 (3):377-398 (2009)
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Abstract

Even if preventive military counter-terrorism may sometimes be ethically justifiable, it remains an open question whether the Bush Doctrine presented a discursively coherent account of the relevant normative conditions. With a view towards answering this question, this article critically examines efforts to ground the morally personifying language of the Bush Doctrine in term of hegemonic stability theory. Particular critical attention is paid to the arguments of leading proponents of this brand of game theory, including J. Yoo, E. Posner, A. Sykes, and J. Goldsmith. When examined in their terms, the Bush Doctine is best understood as an ethically hypocritical and shortsighted international discursive strategy. Its use of moralistic language in demonizing ‘rogue states’ for purely amoral purposes is normatively incoherent and discursively unsustainable. If it is a strategically rational piece of international communication, it seems designed to undermine globally shared normative meanings for the sake of short-term unilateral military advantage.

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Mark Rigstad
Oakland University

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References found in this work

Motivated Irrationality.D. F. Pears & David Pugmire - 1982 - Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 56 (1):157-196.
Preventive War.David Luban - 2004 - Philosophy and Public Affairs 32 (3):207-248.
Institutionalizing the Just War.Allen Buchanan - 2005 - Philosophy and Public Affairs 34 (1):2-38.

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