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The Pentagon's New Map: War and Peace in the Twenty-First Century Hardcover – April 26, 2004

4.2 4.2 out of 5 stars 185 ratings

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A former senior military analyst with the U.S.Naval War College offers a thought-provoking analysis of the United States and global security that utilizes recent military history and strategy; economic, political, and cultural factors; and foreign policy and security issues to examine the future of war and peace, as well as America's role in the international community. 100,000 first printing. 100,000 first printing.
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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

This bold and important book strives to be a practical "strategy for a Second American Century." In this brilliantly argued work, Thomas Barnett calls globalization "this country’s gift to history" and explains why its wide dissemination is critical to the security of not only America but the entire world. As a senior military analyst for the U.S. Naval War College, Barnett is intimately familiar with the culture of the Pentagon and the State Department (both of which he believes are due for significant overhauls). He explains how the Pentagon, still in shock at the rapid dissolution of the once evil empire, spent the 1990s grasping for a long-term strategy to replace containment. The terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, Barnett argues, revealed the gap between an outdated Cold War-era military and a radically different one needed to deal with emerging threats. He believes that America is the prime mover in developing a "future worth creating" not because of its unrivaled capacity to wage war, but due to its ability to ensure security around the world. Further, he believes that the U.S. has a moral responsibility to create a better world and the way he proposes to do that is by bringing all nations into the fold of globalization, or what he calls connectedness. Eradicating disconnectedness, therefore, is "the defining security task of our age." His stunning predictions of a U.S. annexation of much of Latin America and Canada within 50 years as well as an end to war in the foreseeable future guarantee that the book will be controversial. And that's good. The Pentagon's New Map deserves to be widely discussed. Ultimately, however, the most impressive aspects of the book is not its revolutionary ideas but its overwhelming optimism. Barnett wants the U.S. to pursue the dream of global peace with the same zeal that was applied to preventing global nuclear war with the former Soviet Union. High-level civilian policy makers and top military leaders are already familiar with his vision of the future—this book is a briefing for the rest of us and it cannot be ignored. --Shawn Carkonen

From Publishers Weekly

Barnett, professor at the U.S. Naval War College, takes a global perspective that integrates political, economic and military elements in a model for the postâ€"September 11 world. Barnett argues that terrorism and globalization have combined to end the great-power model of war that has developed over 400 years, since the Thirty Years War. Instead, he divides the world along binary lines. An increasingly expanding "Functioning Core" of economically developed, politically stable states integrated into global systems is juxtaposed to a "Non-Integrating Gap," the most likely source of threats to U.S. and international security. The "gap" incorporates Andean South America, the Caribbean, sub-Saharan Africa, the Middle East, Central Asia and much of southwest Asia. According to Barnett, these regions are dangerous because they are not yet integrated into globalism's "core." Until that process is complete, they will continue to lash out. Barnett calls for a division of the U.S. armed forces into two separate parts. One will be a quick-strike military, focused on suppressing hostile governments and nongovernment entities. The other will be administratively oriented and assume responsibility for facilitating the transition of "gap" systems into the "core." Barnett takes pains to deny that implementing the new policy will establish America either as a global policeman or an imperial power. Instead, he says the policy reflects that the U.S. is the source of, and model for, globalization. We cannot, he argues, abandon our creation without risking chaos. Barnett writes well, and one of the book's most compelling aspects is its description of the negotiating, infighting and backbiting required to get a hearing for unconventional ideas in the national security establishment. Unfortunately, marketing the concepts generates a certain tunnel vision. In particular, Barnett, like his intellectual models Thomas Friedman and Francis Fukuyama, tends to accept the universality of rational-actor models constructed on Western lines. There is little room in Barnett's structures for the apocalyptic religious enthusiasm that has been contemporary terrorism's driving wheel and that to date has been indifferent to economic and political factors. That makes his analytical structure incomplete and more useful as an intellectual exercise than as the guide to policy described in the book's promotional literature.
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Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Putnam Adult; First Edition (April 26, 2004)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 448 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0399151753
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0399151750
  • Reading age ‏ : ‎ 18 years and up
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.45 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6.3 x 1.47 x 9.36 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.2 4.2 out of 5 stars 185 ratings

About the author

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Thomas P. M. Barnett
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Thomas P.M. Barnett has worked in U.S. national security circles since the end of the Cold War, starting with the Department of Navy’s premier think tank, the Center for Naval Analyses. He then served as professor at the U.S. Naval War College, where he assisted Vice Admiral Arthur Cebrowski – the father of “network-centric warfare.” After 9/11, Barnett joined Cebrowski’s new Office of Force Transformation in the Office of the Secretary of Defense as his Assistant for Strategic Futures. In that capacity, he developed an influential PowerPoint brief on globalization and international security (see his 2005 TED Talk), which later morphed into a New York Times-bestselling book, The Pentagon’s New Map (2004). Barnett extended his “New Map” series with the volumes Blueprint for Action (2005) and Great Powers (2009).

Upon leaving government service in 2005, Dr. Barnett worked for a series of technology start-ups exploring cognitive artificial intelligence, crowdsourced wargaming, and enterprise resilience. He worked for years as a journalist, both as a Contributing Editor at Esquire and a Scripps News syndicated columnist. Barnett was likewise a Visiting Strategist at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory and later a Senior Research Fellow at the Beijing-based Knowfar Institute for Strategic & Defence Studies.

Thomas presently serves as Principal Business Strategist at Throughline, a Washington DC-based enterprise design and strategy firm that serves the U.S. national security community, major U.S. government agencies, multinational corporations, and non-profits. Dr. Barnett’s 2023 book, America’s New Map, is a unique product of the author’s deep collaboration with the firm’s senior leadership, graphic artists, and content designers.

Over his career, Thomas has generated more than 500 publications and has delivered more than 1,000 speeches across all 50 U.S. states and 50 countries. Dr. Barnett holds a PhD in political science from Harvard University and Green Bay Packers’ season tickets.

Customer reviews

4.2 out of 5 stars
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Customers say

Customers find the book informative and thought-provoking. They describe it as an interesting and enlightening read. However, opinions differ on its clarity and partisanship. Some find it clear and easy to understand, while others feel it lacks nuance and jargon.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

18 customers mention "Information quality"18 positive0 negative

Customers find the book informative and thought-provoking. They say it offers a valuable general perspective on geopolitical issues and is well-researched. Readers mention it's an absolute must-read for anyone interested in GeoPolitics or modern military politics.

"...Along similar lines, Barnett's book is well reasoned and clear but not a dry academic work...." Read more

"...assess the current world geopolitical situation and offers a valuable general perspective and somewhat less valuable specific remedies or solutions...." Read more

"...and preserved by free movement of people, energy, investments, and security..." Read more

"...(descripiton) of Planet Earth in political, economic and philosophic terms...." Read more

13 customers mention "Readability"13 positive0 negative

Customers find the book engaging and informative. They say it's well-written and worth reading. The author provides a good review of the world outside military force and has a good section on the briefing culture. Readers appreciate the author's storytelling style.

"...It is a worthwhile read." Read more

"...The saving grace is Barnett is a good story teller and it is very readable...." Read more

"...A very interesting and enlightening read, it is the only book of this type I have been drawn to read that has altered my view of the world by..." Read more

"...This book while a bit repetitious is worth the small extra effort...." Read more

7 customers mention "Clarity"3 positive4 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the book's clarity. Some find it a clear and well-reasoned exposition of Planet Earth, with its main themes clearly stated and presented in a human way. Others feel it lacks nuance and is simple, with ambiguous jargon that can lead to flawed thinking.

"...Their condition is one of depravation, repression, ignorance, poverty, and malnutrition...." Read more

"...Another area of high praise I have is in his richly human presentation throughout the book...." Read more

"...Second, the greatest collection of undefined and ambiguous jargon - babble really - in place of analysis...." Read more

"...the book exhibits a fair amount of depth and rigor, its main theses are easily stated...." Read more

5 customers mention "Partisanship"3 positive2 negative

Customers have different views on the book's partisanship. Some say it defies partisanship and focuses on evidence and analysis, not politics. Others mention that the author makes the case that globalization is a fragile undertaking and doesn't look beyond globalism.

"...My first praise for the book is that it defies the partisanship that most of us have grown weary of - we want a solution that addresses the real..." Read more

"...Barnett himself makes the case that globalization is a fragile undertaking similar to an interconnected chain in which any broken link destroys the..." Read more

"...I found this book a very clear exposition (descripiton) of Planet Earth in political, economic and philosophic terms...." Read more

"...Of course he does not look beyond globalism and perhaps that it just a bit too much to ask from one book." Read more

Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on January 2, 2005
    This book offers hope, a hope to solve the rift within our nation, the rift between us and the other civilized nations of the world and the rift between civilized nations and the rest of the world. Read other PNM reviews on Amazon - quite a few liberals and conservatives seem to agree with Barnett which is quite a feat and offers important common ground in all of the three arenas mentioned above.

    My first praise for the book is that it defies the partisanship that most of us have grown weary of - we want a solution that addresses the real problems and works and not one that gives our 'side' a 'point'. He is unafraid to praise and criticize the administration and its critics as his analysis sees fit. People are now aware of the dangers in this world and want results regardless of who provides them because the stakes are so high.

    Along similar lines, Barnett's book is well reasoned and clear but not a dry academic work. He takes us through the background and history we need to put the situation in context. As others on Amazon have stated, through his force of reasoning you end up reevaluating some of your positions that you may have held dear, such as immigration policy, foreign policy, military policy, and outsourcing.

    Another area of high praise I have is in his richly human presentation throughout the book. His perspective is not from some detached analyst in an 'ivory tower' but from a person with real feelings and experiences who isn't afraid to share them with you. He offers a profound interconnection between his personal life and his work that reveals the depth of his thinking, for example he shares his experience with battling his young daughter's cancer and how it taught him to never give up the battle for a positive outcome. How often do you read a book about globalization that is inspiring at this level?

    I also relished the moments when he waxes philosophical as he reveals the differences between horizontal and vertical thinking. He uses this in describing his own experiences growing up, how his son is learning this and how nations often behave this way. There is a place and role for each of us no matter how we think the trick is to apply the appropriate type of thinking to the roles we choose. (You want a physician who knows his subject deeply but an architect should know his broadly.) As a horizontal thinker he qualifies as a Renaissance Man.

    After reading The Lexus and the Olive Tree by Thomas Friedman, I was inspired to believe that globalization was a positive trend, however globalization seemed like little more than noise (such as Seattle anti-WTO & the waves of outsourcing pain) in the events unfolding around us. Now in perspective, globalization takes center stage in all of our lives. Thomas Friedman is about a general concept of globalization whereas Barnett describes the historical context, the practical impact and the hope it offers all.

    After seeing Barnett on C-SPAN and reading his blogs I thought his book would simply offer greater insight into his thinking on globalization, however it has become much more than that it has become a textbook that I have filled with notes and questions. His book also offers a glimpse into the future synergy between written copy and online technology. On his website he offers the 'extended DVD' version of his book. You get the 'deleted scenes', the slides, updates and so much more.

    Some critics view his work as overly optimistic, and it is typical to hear criticisms without positive solutions but he offers a solution that gives the world hope. Do you prefer to sit paralyzed with fear or move forward with the best answer you have?

    I know the book is a success when I find myself continually asking, "What do we need to do to now?" or "How do I apply this in my life?", and then attempt to put issues into the context of the maps Tom has provided.

    And my criticisms? They pale in comparison - buy the book and prepare for a complete education.
    11 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on October 5, 2004
    "The Pentagon's New Map- War And Peace In The Twenty-First Century, by Thomas P. M. Barnett, a strategic researcher and professor at the U.S. Naval War College, is another of the many books that assess the current world geopolitical situation and offers a valuable general perspective and somewhat less valuable specific remedies or solutions. Although the book exhibits a fair amount of depth and rigor, its main theses are easily stated. Those countries that are civilized, have the `rule of law', free or mostly free democratic societies, believe in free trade and transparency in business and government, are all members of what he calls "The Functioning Core". They are the pro-globalization, pro-connectivity elements that will supplant what Walter Russell Mead in "Power, Terror, War, and Peace" called the "Fordist" state and are the antithetical elements to what Barnett calls "The Non-Functioning Gap", the non-free, non-connected, chaotic and/or repressive states which reject globalization and would be termed "pre-modern" by Robert Cooper in "The Breaking of Nations". Mr. Barnett is clear in his indictment of "The Gap" as the seat of most of the trouble in the world and specifically our future challenge in the post 9/11 world. He maintains that we need to reorganize the world or specifically "The Gap" according to "The Core's" rule-sets. He does exhibit humor in his writing; "This diagnostic approach isn't about assigning blame or pointing fingers; that's what Congress is for", isn't bad, his "Mind the Gap" is. Another focus of this book is the challenge of transforming the Pentagon into two complementary organizations; one to deal with fighting and force projection, the other with the transition to and maintenance of a functioning rule-set based society. He refers to these roles as that of Hobbes' Leviathan and that of a System Administrator. Although he rejects Niall Ferguson's ("Colossus") view of America as a benevolent imperial power on a definitional basis (we are not imposing our will, nor do we have an imperial executive to act as an emperor), he doesn't reject our role as `The Core's' rule enforcer in `The Gap'. He also shares the views of Ferguson and Samuel Huntington (in "Who Are We?" although he rejects "The Clash Of Civilizations") when he declares that `We are a multi-cultural free-market economy whose minimal rule-sets allow for maximum individual freedom.' He also says that the US government is the greatest force for good the world has ever known and that the US military is the single greatest instrument of that good, so it's surprising that he claims to be a Democrat.

    One of his transforming suggestions for the future that is sure to be badly received is the idea that there be no service designation (between Army, Navy, Air Force) for officers of Flag rank. Another, similar to that of Walter Russell Mead, is to increase the UN Security Council permanent membership to 20, but with weakened vetoes for the non-original members. The book ends with a Ten-Step plan for world integration that starts with Iraq and ends, admittedly in the far future, with Africa. It also echoes Ambassador Mark Palmer's "Breaking The Real Axis Of Evil; How To Oust The World's Last Dictators By 2025 ". Barnett has added several new terms and concepts within an organized, detailed defense of the merits of globalization to the literature. It is a worthwhile read.
    15 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

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  • Ekström
    5.0 out of 5 stars Freiheit-Wahrheit-Verantwortung.de
    Reviewed in Germany on April 20, 2016
    Ein entlarvendes Buch eines skrupellosen Technokraten der Macht, der bedenkenlos Millionen von Menschen töten würde.
    „Wie kämen die Deutschen dazu, sich die Räuberei und Schinderei durch Fremde gefallen zu lassen?“ Martin Luther, An den teutschen Adels
    Diese Worte sind aktueller denn je.
  • PHW
    4.0 out of 5 stars The Empire strikes back !
    Reviewed in France on February 22, 2016
    "The Grand Chessboard" de Zbigniew Brzezinski se devait d'avoir une suite. "The Pentagon's New Map" de Thomas P.M. Barnett en est le prolongement indispensable pour qui veut comprendre aujourd'hui, l'enfer de la globalisation, derrière ses bons sentiments.
  • Adorno
    3.0 out of 5 stars Odd mixture
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on January 5, 2007
    Barnett is an academic at the US Naval War College and has spent a lot of time working for US government think tanks. This is part strategic analysis and part autobiographical reflection on the nature of the US defence policy process. In some respects this latter part is more interesting than the strategy in its discussion of why some ideas become influential. The autobiographical stuff also tends to get in the way of developing a rigorous argument.

    The central argument is basically Frances Fukuyama (or that of Arquilla and Ronfeldt's Noopolitik - Black and Wildavsky were making pretty much the same argument in The Real World Order in the early `90s) The world can be seen as consisting of two parts the - functioning core - and the non-integrating gap. The former includes North America, Europe, Japan China, Russia, Brazil, India etc. The latter includes the bulk of Latin America, Africa, the Middle East, Central and South East Asia. Essentially the core have bought into globalization and latter haven't. It follows that the logic of US foreign and security policy and that of the core as whole should be to integrate the gap.

    This is the standard liberal argument. The strength of the book is that Barnett refuses to get bogged down in discussions of the war on terror or Iraq. The weaknesses - there is no real appreciation of the difficulties of what he proposes. For all his criticisms of the Pentagon Barnett is a "beltway bandit" who sees the world from Washington DC. He also fails to really pin down what he means by some of his key concepts - connectedness and rule sets in particular.

    A subsidiary argument runs through the book is the failure of the American defence community to adapt to the end of the Cold War. Essentially the Pentagon has been looking around for a "near peer competitor" (read China) that would justify lots of new high tech equipment while spending increasing amounts of time on humanitarian operations and non-convential conflicts. That is spending the budget on a preparing for a future war while failing to adapt to the challenges that are really happening.

    I normally say that books could be 50 or 100 pages shorter but this could easily be 200 pages shorter and say the same things.
  • Peter
    3.0 out of 5 stars Wenn man die Bücher von Zbignew Brzezinski gelesen hat
    Reviewed in Germany on June 5, 2017
    kann man von Thomas Barnett nur enttäuscht sein. Barnetts Analysen sind oberflächlich, von geringer Substanz und umhüllt von sehr viel inhaltslosem Füllmaterial.
    Drei Sterne gebe ich, weil ich dennoch empfehle, das Buch zum Verständnis unserer heutigen Situation zu lesen. Der Autor wird gelegentlich zitiert, wenn es darum geht, die Ursache der Massenmigration nach Europa zu erklären. Die entsprechenden Passagen finden sich auf S. 206 ff. Barnett sorgt sich darum, Europa und Japan könnten aussterben. Warum ihn dies bewegt erklärt er nicht. Er ist der Auffassung, die in Zukunft fehlenden Arbeitskräfte sollten wir aus den Gebieten mit Bevölkerungsüberschuss importieren. Andere Möglichkeiten, wie z.B. den Ersatz eventuell fehlender Arbeitskräfte durch modernere, produktivere Technologien oder schlicht durch die Ankurbelung des eigenen Bevölkerungswachstums, zieht er nicht in Betracht.
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  • Oberhaider
    5.0 out of 5 stars Einblick in amerikanisches Denken
    Reviewed in Germany on January 27, 2016
    Bezeichnend ist, dass deutsche Politiker und Deutschland nur am Rand auftauchen. Man sieht, sie spielen m Weltmaßstab keine Rolle, sie sind Randfiguren.