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John Joseph Mearsheimer (/ˈmɪərʃaɪmər/; born December 14, 1947) is an American political scientist and international relations scholar who belongs to the realist school of thought.[3] He is the R. Wendell Harrison Distinguished Service Professor at the University of Chicago.
He has been described as the most influential realist of his generation.[4] Mearsheimer is best known for developing the theory of offensive realism, which describes the interaction between great powers as being primarily driven by the rational desire to achieve regional hegemony in an anarchic international system.
In accordance with his theory, Mearsheimer believes that China's growing power will likely bring it into conflict with the United States.
Main tenets The theory is grounded on five central assumptions similar to the ones that lie at the core of Kenneth Waltz's defensive neorealism. These are:[10][11]
* Great powers are the main actors in world politics and the international system is anarchical
* All states possess some offensive military capability
* States can never be certain of the intentions of other states
* States have survival as their primary goal
* States are rational actors, capable of coming up with sound strategies that maximize their prospects for survival
Like defensive neorealism, offensive realism posits an anarchic international system in which rational great powers uncertain of other states' intentions and capable of military offensive strive to survive.[12][13] Although initially developed from similar propositions to those of defensive neorealism, Mearsheimer's offensive neorealism advances drastically different predictions regarding great power behaviour in international politics.[14][15]
Mainly, it diverges from defensive neorealism in regards to the accumulation of power a state needs to possess to ensure its security and the issuing of strategy states pursue to meet this satisfactory level of security. Ultimately, Mearsheimer's offensive neorealism draws a much more pessimistic picture of international politics characterised by dangerous inter-state security competition likely leading to conflict and war.[16][17]
it is still totally worth the time and very thought provoking
you completely ignore the fundamental aspect of his position:
the lobby industry is what rules the US; and not even in the 'Israel lobby' things are what they seem, as it is mostly made up of pro-apocalypse Evangelists.
Anti-Zionist views alright cool, sadly there is no alternative to guarantee the survival of Jewish people aside from allowing them to fight for their own protected state that will guarantee said survival.
don't believe in any ontological difference in the humanity of Jews and Gentiles.
originally posted by: FurPerson
best one can hope for is a sort of equilibrium I'd think.
but personally I am a total liberal globalist and still believe that what Mearsheimer calls too one sided, our global institutions, is the only way to ensure some sort of global cooperation.
Would be just really handy if we'd have a common adversary like ALIEN!s... lol
a reply to: Annee