Thursday, November 26, 2009 - 2:37 PM
In my experience, American Thanksgiving is the holiday that tends to charm foreigners (as for Canadian Thanksgiving, well, click here). Large feasts and the giving of thanks for whatever good stuff happened in the past year will tend to have that effect.
From an international relations or a political economy perspective, however, this has not been the greatest of years. I worry that America's soft power might be dented if American hosts fail to come up with good things to be thankful for when hosting their international guests.
Joshua Keating, Tom Ricks and Steve Walt have already posted some things to be thankful for. Here's my Top Ten list:
1) Obama's Asia trip went better than expected. Many commentators -- myself included -- have been hard on the Obama administration's effots in East Asia. Go click over to James Fallows' blog, however, and you'll see his best efforts to persuade you otherwise (start here and work backwards). I'm completely unconvinced on the trade front, mind you, but I do buy the idea that the trip was a down payment on some long-term policy progress in the region.
2) Iran, North Korea and Venezuela are all less popular than they were a year ago. It's easy to lose perspective and start thinking "time is running out!" when looking at various rogue regimes. This does not change the fact that compared to a year ago, each of these countries is more isolated and beleaguered than they were in November 2008. [UPDATE: see here.]
3) We're moving down the learning curve for pandemics. H1N1 has been awful, but it hasn't been that awful. Hopefully, this means that national and international health officials have learned valuable lessons before H5N1 rears its ugly head.
4) Great books about this crash -- as opposed to past ones. We started this year reading about the Great Depression to get a grip on what happened in 2008. The first crop of Great Recession books are now out, however, and they're gripping reads.
5) The United States will not be breaking apart anytime soon. I don't think this prediction by Russian analyst Igor Panarin will be coming to fruition.
6) Lou Dobbs is going to have to put up or shut up. I see that Lou Dobbs is thinking of running for political office. As a longtime Dobbs loather observer, I think this is a fantastic idea. The grubbiness of campaigning -- and, in all likelihood, losing -- is the perfect antidote to craks like Dobbs who misinterpret cable ratings as a sign of political power. [UPDATE: Damn, that didn't take long.]
7) Good times for children's films. As a parent of two children, I solemnly swear that my children's crop of movies is far and away superior to the dreck I had to watch as a child. Thank you, Pixar!!!
8) Salma Hayek appearing on the front page of the Wall Street Journal. Really, the world needs more of this.
9) Blogging has become respectable in international relations. A serious thank you to the hard-working staff here at Foreign Policy. By going big on the blog front and inviting serious IR scholars like Stephen Walt, Peter Feaver and Marc Lynch to blog for them, FP has transformed the way my scholarly colleagues think about the blogging enterprise. Blogging will never be universallly embraced by the academy -- but it doesn't have the stigma it had, say, four years ago.
10) Zombies are not walking the earth. Despite heightened fears of the walking undead, it appears that the living can breathe easier for another year.
Finally, a heartfelt thank you to all of my readers, for offering their constructive commentary and deconstructing my weakest arguments.
Happy Slapsgiving Thanksgiving!!
I definetly agree on 8. ;-)
Thank you to you, Dr Drezner for bringing up the blog. Now, I can have access to new scholars of IR and still keep the old. I hope to read many books still and write books of my own about international politics. That's a very interesting Top Ten List. I didn't know that zombies will be walking around the earth in the next year. If they do, then what shall we do about it? That's quite right about Salma Hayek. She should have been in Justin Timberlake's Senorita video. Old cartoons are fine too, Dr Drezner. I liked Quick Draw Mc Graw, The Road Runner Show, Elmer Fudd and Loghorn Foghorn. Lou Dobbs? Why not the girls in Supermodel Me. If the US breaks up, I'll buy it on eBay and put it back together again. Now, let us wait for Letterman's top ten.
It's official the Russians are lunatics if they believe that the U.S. will disband,I think to much vodka and daydreaming might have caused this theory.
It's not quite 2010 yet -- still another month for a zombie threat to erupt out of China and break the brain futures bubble.
Dear Professor,
Do you really think that Iran, North Korea and Venezuela are more isolated? Russia and China may back the US plan in the IAEA, but I doubted that they will go along with Sanction as Brazil has already stated it will not back sanction against Iran. From what I read from experts and scholars in that field, the whole Iran nuclear crisis is a fraud. The Iranians are very astute and know when to accelerate and when to push the break.
Loud Dobbs would probably run for office as you said, don't you think there is a sizable fringe of the population that would vote for him? If Rush Limbaud, Bill O'Reilly, Sean Hannity, Laura Ingrham etc.. could have an audience, I do not see why he would not get elected...this is the September 11 after effect...(jingoistic nationalism).
I agree with you that Igor Panarin's prediction will not happen anytime soon.
Daniel W. Drezner is professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University.
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