HENRY A. KISSINGER’S ARTICLE ON TERRORISM: A CRITICAL ANALYSIS
Mokhamad Toha Rudin(1*)
(1) Muhammadiyah University Surakarta
(*) Corresponding Author
Abstract
The aim of this study is to conduct a critical analysis of Kissinger’s article “America’s Assignment” on Newsweek 2004, and to elaborate US foreign policy toward Islam world and Terrorism after the end if the Cold War, this article also tries to find the ideology or tradition of American foreign policy reflected in Kissinger’s article “America’s Assignment”, and how is Realism ideology reflected in the article. The study employs library research in which the data gathered from books, journals, magazines, and internet. The study also employs Van Dijk’s critical linguistic model for the critical analysis of Kissinger’s “America’s Assignment”.
The result of the study shows that Kissinger’s “America’s Assignment” reflects both "multilateralistrealist” and “realist-idealist” perspectives for the US foreign policy that the US government should employ. He argues that no single superpower in the world could manage the world order alone without the participants of other world countries. He opposes W. Bush’s unilateral foreign policy toward Iraq though he agrees to “the move toward empire (terrorist) must be halted immediately”. He also argues that bringing democracy into the world, especially Iraq and Muslim worlds, is necessary in order to set up the new world order. The study also shows that after the collapse of the Soviet Union, there is a new ideological and cultural conflict between Islam, especially the militant fundamentalist in the fringe of Islam, against the US (Western) globalization of democratization. The new conflict is also generated by the Western phobia toward Islam that can be traced back to the mid-century when the War of Crusade between Islam and Christianity happened.
Keywords
Full Text:
PDFReferences
Barry, Tom. Ed. (2004). Toward a New Grand Strategy for the US Foreign Policy. IRC Strategic Dialogue No. 3. International Relation Center. www.irc-online.org, People-Centered Policy Alternatives, since 1979.
Contreras, R. G., (2003). American Unilateral ism and the Doctrine of Preenption: the Case of Iraq. Denver: University of Denver.
Eriyanto, (2001). Analisis Wacana: Pengantar Analisis Teks Media, Yogyakarta: LkiS.
Fukuyama, Francis. (2006). The Clash of Cultures and American Hegemony. Retrieved from http://www.theamerican-interest.com/ai2/article.cfm?Id=178&MI d=1)
Hoadly, S., (2003). Characterising US Foreign Policy. Centre for Strategic Studies ISSN 1175-1452 CSS Strategic Briefing Papers Volume 5: Part I.
Kegley, Jr., Charles W., & Eugene R. W., (1982). American Foreign Policy: Pattern and Process, New York: St. Martin’s Press, Inc.
Kissinger, Henry A., (2004). America’s Assignment. Newsweek, November 8, 2004.
Krauthammer, Charles, Democratic Realism: An American Foreign Policy for a Unipolar World, American Enterprise Institute, the International Relations Center. Peoplecentered policy alternatives since 1979, 2004 (http://www.aei.org/docLib/20042007_book755text.pdf)
Siswanto, (1999). Kebijakan Amerika dan Indonesia terhadap Timor Timur dalam Perspektif Containment Policy, Jakarta: Pusat Kajian Wilayah Amerika, Universitas Indonesia.
Snyder, J., (2004). One World, Rival Theories, Columbia: Columbia University.
Wilson, Stan Le Roy, (1995). Mass Media/Mass Culture: An Introduction, Carolina: McGrowhill, Inc.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.22146/rubikon.v1i1.34204
Article Metrics
Abstract views : 2030 | views : 1265Refbacks
- There are currently no refbacks.
Copyright (c) 2014 Rubikon : Journal of Transnational American Studies
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.