Accolades
"Nominated for . . ."
"Best of . . ."
The American Mind's Top 5 books in 2004 (ranked #1)
Enter Stage Right's Top 20 books in 2004 ("ranked" #8 in
un-numbered list)
"Bestseller Lists"
Washington Post Area Hardcover
Nonfiction Bestseller List (9 January 2005)
Denver Post Area Hardcover
Nonfiction Bestseller List (23 January 2005)
Foreign Affairs "Foreign
Policy/Int'l Affairs" Bestseller List (March 05)
Foreign Affairs Bestseller List
(February 05)
Foreign Affairs Bestseller List
(January 05)
Foreign Affairs Bestseller List
(December 04)
Foreign Affairs Bestseller List
(November 04)
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(October 04)
Foreign Affairs Bestseller List
(September 04)
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(July 04)
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(June 04)
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(May 04)
Foreign Affairs Bestseller List
(April 04)
New York Times advertisement

On the Work of Thomas P.M. Barnett
...
Yaneer Bar-Yam, President, New England Complex Systems
Institute
"Thomas
Barnett is an original and wide-view thinker who has a message that
can inform everyone and elevate the discussion of global security."
Vice Admiral Arthur K. Cebrowski, USN (my former boss as
the college and at the Office of the Secretary of Defense)
"Dr. Barnett's work puts
him in the same class as the great and powerful minds that crafted
America's post-World War II strategy and created the institutions
that brought stability and prosperity to the Free World. Like them,
he develops a formulation crossing all sector boundaries: political,
economic, cultural, religious, security. But unlike them, he leaves
behind containment and offers instead a hopeful and eager embrace
characteristic of America at her best. He has provided a useful
strategic context for the continuing process of transforming our
national security structures and capabilities. As a former
president of the Naval War College, I feel confident is saying that
policy makers who act on this work will not go far wrong."
Dr. Donald C.F. Daniel, Professor, Security Studies
Program, School of Foreign Service, Georgetown University
"In a
manner analogous to Samuel Huntington's argument on the 'clash of
civilizations' and to Robert Kagan's on the state of U.S. and
European relations, Thomas Barnett offers a sweeping vision of
global trends as he addresses the international role for U.S.
military forces. Barnett did not spark the debate about the U.S.
military's role—the Bush administration did that with its
pronouncements and actions—but he frames the issues within which the
administration's policies actions can be evaluated. Too rarely does
it happen that someone writes a book that so crystallizes a major
argument that it becomes a focal point in a broader debate. Those
who would either support or criticize the administration must
address its elements it they are to participate productively in the
debate."
Dr. Paul. B. Davis, national security expert, Washington
D.C. (professor at National Defense University)
"Thomas
Barnett's approach to enhancing the management perspectives of
institutional leaders from all disciplines has proven infectious.
I lecture often and facilitate executive workshops on the demands
for transformational approaches to our uncertain future. Whether it
be with the leadership of the GAO, OMB, or the military's Joint
Forces Command, I never miss an opportunity to introduce and build
on Barnett's groundbreaking work. Barnett's book should be as
instrumental for executive leaders as Friedman's The Lexus and
the Olive Tree."
Dr. R. Joseph DeSutter, national security expert,
Washington, D.C. (National Defense University professor)
"A grand
theory of modern international conflict. From a technology
standpoint, Defense Transformation has been embraced by two
administrations and accepted across defense circles for over a
decade. On the policy side, there is also a consensus that
breathtaking twenty-first century technological opportunities are
among the keys to America's post-bilateral national security.
Without wasting our time on these settled issues, Barnett employs a
Mahanian-type geopolitical approach to help us understand the
implications of this policy-technology relationship. The resulting
bold global rationale invites a new vein of debate toward essential
but missing pieces of the future security puzzle. Thomas Barnett
gives us an overdue framework that goes way beyond commercial
analogies to serious questions of policy, strategy, and security."
Esquire
(David Granger, Editor-in-Chief)
"Since
the end of the Cold War, the United States has been trying to come
up with an operating theory of the world. Now there's a leading
contender. Barnett puts the world in context."
John Gallo, Senior
Associate, Charles River Associates, Aerospace & Defense Practice
"A must
read for senior-level executives in the defense industry. Barnett's
work applies a systematic approach to add order to an otherwise
complex set of issues. More important, it makes strategic
recommendations for international and defense policy that have clear
implications to the ongoing transformation of the defense base."
Sherri Goodman, Senior Fellow, The CNA Corporation, and
former Deputy Undersecretary of Defense
"His work
should be read not only by policy makers and pundits, but by anyone
who wants to understand how the world works in the Age of Terror."
Peter Ho, Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Defense,
Singapore
"Professor Thomas Barnett provides a framework to better understand
a phenomenon that has been more talked about than understood.
Globalization is important and deserves study, not only because of
its macro global effects, but also because of its local effects."
Gary Clyde Hufbauer, Reginald Jones Senior Fellow,
Institute for International Economics
"Barnett's special talent is his dual mastery of defense strategy
and global economics. His worldview has already shaped thinking in
the top echelons of the Pentagon and CIA. Barnett's voice promises
to define U.S. military and economic strategy for combating threats
that will confront the United States over the next two decades,
perhaps beyond. These threats emerge from the sixty-odd desperate
countries that constitute Barnett's 'Gap,' and provide the cradle
for genocide and terror. Whatever happens in U.S. relations with
China, Japan, the European Union, and Russia, these new threats will
require special U.S. attention. Barnett points the way . . .
The
Pentagon's New Map promises to be an exciting and influential
book, alongside Special Providence (Mead), Clash of
Civilizations (Huntington), and The Ends of Earth
(Kaplan)."
Jerry MacArthur Hultin, Dean, Howe School of Technology
Management, Stevens Institute of Technology; and former Under Secretary
of the Navy
"Tom
Barnett breaks the rules to create new rules, and in doing so, he
see the future without the fog that obscures most analysts. Tom was
an essential ally to me, as Under Secretary of the Navy, is crafting
high-value breakthroughs for some of the most intractable national
security problems facing our country."
Thomas Ivancie, President, America's Future Foundation
"Incisive
and exciting. Thomas Barnett is the one-stop shop for policy types
looking to know where and how America will be engaged overseas in
the century to come."
Dave Lassek, Vice President Naval Programs, United
Defense
"Professor Barnett's presentations on the global geopolitical
environment provide the most insightful analysis of the forces that
stress the world's economies and the political implications that
result. His thoughts and analysis in book form should serve as a
primer for anyone involved in the global marketplace. This will
become a basic tool for anyone performing environmental assessments,
strategic planning, or even direct marketing."
Dr. Lawrence Modisett, national security expert, Newport,
Rhode Island
"Thomas
Barnett has emerged as one of the most influential strategic
thinkers in the U.S. and beyond. The currency his ideas have
gained, his credibility in senior quarters within and outside the
government, and the continuing evolution of his concepts guarantee
that he will remain a leading influence on U.S. strategy."
C. Kenneth Morrelly, President, Long Island Forum of
Technology
"In his
work, Dr. Barnett arranges a complex set of global conditions in an
intuitive manner such that his audiences become directly and totally
absorbed with its context. The result of his methodology, which
logically intertwines facts, develops hypotheses and then validates
them, mixed with humor, is that he is able to take a complex
subject—the nexus between national security and globalization—and
make it extraordinarily accessible. In short, he's able to provide
an overview of global change that helps business leaders understand
better how their companies must adapt in order to survive in this
complex international environment. As a corporate executive, I can
say that being exposed to his thinking was a powerful and useful
experience for me."
Robert Orr, Vice-President and Washington Director,
Council on Foreign Relations
"Barnett's work is a tour de force. I have never seen such a
persuasive presentation linking defense policy and globalization
analyses."
John Petersen, President, The Arlington Institute
"Thomas
Barnett is one of the most thoughtful and original thinkers that
this generation of national security analysts has produced."
William J. Raduchel, Ph.D., former CTO, AOL Time Warner,
and former chief strategy officer, Sun Microsystems
"You may
not like the conclusions, but the logic is flawless. We do live in
a new world, and Barnett's analysis lays bare the realities we face
as a nation. If you are an investor, an executive, or a
citizen—meaning everyone—you need to understand this worldview."
Dr. Peter Schoettle, Senior Staff, Center for Public
Policy Education, The Brookings Institution
"Confused
about the multitude of seemingly disparate events around the globe?
Wondering if there are any connections among U.S.-China relations,
the price of light Saudi crude, and cocaine runners in Latin
America? Intrigued by what distant financial crises may mean for
U.S. defense policy? Professor Thomas Barnett's innovative insights
and cogent analysis make sense of much of the current world. You
will be amazed at the lightbulbs that will go off in your own mind
as you read his work."
Asif M. Shakh, President and CEO, International Resources
Group Ltd
"Carefully researched and brilliantly argued, it pulls together
information that previously has been dispersed, and reaches dramatic
new conclusions . . . I may not agree with all the conclusions he
reaches, but Barnett has changed the debate in ways that are
fundamental, energizing, and ultimately positive. Whatever side of
the debate you are on, this book is a must read. Barnett is one of
the rare thinkers who combine the scholarship, energy, and
imagination to put forward a truly 'new paradigm.'"
Rear Admiral Joseph C. Strasser, USN (ret.), former
President, Naval War College
"Thomas
Barnett has undertaken the challenge of exploring ongoing
globalization and identifying those countries and regions that are
actively participating in this process as the functioning core, as
well as those areas that are disconnected from the core and its rule
sets and norms that bind nations together. He offers a road map to
engage those dangerously disconnected in the globalization process.
Barnett goes where others have not been. His work should be
required reading for those actively concerned with international
security and world order."
Mac Thornberry, U.S. House of Representatives (R, Texas)
"Barnett
is one of our most provocative and cutting-edge thinkers about
national security issues. His work is extremely important as
members of Congress and other policy makers think about our nation's
security in the twenty-first century. He sees the big picture and
how the pieces of day-to-day events fit into it. You may disagree,
but you'd better not ignore what he has to say."
Stewart Umpleby, professor of management science, George
Washington University
"Thomas
Barnett regularly briefs very high-ranking government officials in
Washington, D.C. For several years, he has been one of the leading
figures in defining a new global strategic doctrine for the United
States in the post-Cold War period. If you want to know what the
president, vice-president, and secretaries of state and defense are
thinking, read this book."
Dr. Michael Vlahos, Senior Professional Staff, The Johns
Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory; former Director, Security Studies
Program, The Johns Hopkins University Nitze School of Advanced
International Studies; and former Director, Center for the Study of
Foreign Affairs, U.S. Department of State
"Barnett
gives us a quintessentially American vision of our future in the
grand tradition of Dewey and James: pragmatic, optimistic,
exuberant, compassionate. It is a refreshing contrast to the
mind-numbing screeds of scholars, naysayers, and policy wonks!"
Vice Admiral Thomas R. Weschler, USN (ret.), former
Director of Logistics, Joint Staff; ballistic missile guidance expert;
and coordinator of the destroyer and nuclear cruiser programs
"Professor Barnett takes the vital theme that military and economic
strategy are convergent, and uses it to show how the two fields of
strategy not only coexist but significantly reinforce each other.
It is clear that the two areas are independent at their peril! The
total approach is masterfully developed, logically explained, and
clearly exhibited. The New Rule Set and its application have to be
part of the thinking man's lexicon now."
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