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Synopsis
In this important new book, John McCormick argues that the EU has become an economic and political superpower, whose new global role calls into doubt most of the recent assessments of unipolarity in world politics and American "empire". In his inimitably clear and accessible style, McCormick shows how the rise of Europe has been underplayed because of traditional notions of power politics based on military might which, he argues, are much less relevant than in the past.
Foreign Affairs
As its title implies, this book does more than reject the oft-heardcharge that Europe is in economic, military, and demographic decline. McCormick argues that the European Union is nothing less than "a superpower -- the new pole in a post-modern bipolar international order." He claims not that the EU has developed the political unity or military power to rival the United States but rather that the post-Cold War world requires a new understanding of what power is. The age of the military superpower is over, and "influence in the era of globalization is best achieved by the use of diplomacy, the provision of economic opportunity and political incentives, and the exercise of soft power -- all qualities that the EU has become adept at employing." McCormick makes an original, provocative, and well-informed case -- but could be accused of overselling it. He notes that the United States has "long-term domestic economic problems" and "internal social and political divisions" while ignoring similar problems within the EU. He rightly points to Washington's limited ability to influence others with military force but seems confident of the EU's ability to do so merely through force of example.